When people from my father’s generation bought shoes they would keep them for years as they were expensive, having them re heeled and re soled by cobblers. In recent years shoes have become so cheap that people throw them when the innersole wears out.
I am lucky to have inherited from my grandfather a kit for shoe maintenance. It’s from the 1920s and it has everything you need to do this. It’s a mahogany box and in it are two recesses for holding tins of polish, space for a rag along with two brushes- one coarse for applying polish and the other softer for buffing. It also has a metal shoe horn and a boot hook, which is a long hook on a handle. It’s really lovely and though old fashioned I use it every day. You can buy all the bits that are in it from any hardware store or shoe shop, and i would recommend getting a nice box to store it all in so you don’t lose any of it.
Firstly, start with a good pair of shoes; there is no remedy for poor quality. Loosen all the laces, right the way down until the are all slack. Insert the shoehorn till it touches the sole of the shoe. A metal shoe horn is essential as the plastic ones you can get wil flex, causing the shoe to wear out quicker. If you are wearing boots you will now use the leather loop on the back of the boot to attach the boot hook. For shoes, place one hand on the shoe horn and the other under the sole at the heel, not grasping the back edge of the shoe, and push up on the heel whilst removing the shoe horn in one fluid movement. Be careful to keep the shoe horn as close to your calf as possible; pulling back away from your leg will stretch the leather and quickly break the shoe.
Keep your shoes clean – mud and dirt will dry out and sap the moisture from the leather, making it brittle and prone to damage.
Regular polishing with good quality wax polish and a stiff brush will keep the leather supple and help prevent splitting. The liquid polish or ‘scuff cover’ you get in applicator bottles is essentially paint and will dry the leather out and cause it to split quicker.
Sticking to these simple rules should help you keep your shoes for many years of comfortable walking.
xx