I am now weak as a newborn kitten and exhausted, but the boots are on the last. If you ever want a good fight, try lasting a pair of ostrich boots that decide they don’t wish to be lasted.

I am now weak as a newborn kitten and exhausted, but the boots are on the last. If you ever want a good fight, try lasting a pair of ostrich boots that decide they don’t wish to be lasted.

I am genuinely so proud of myself right now. I ran into a small issue as I was putting these together. Instead of barreling ahead and hoping for the best because I had a deadline, I stopped before it was too late. I went home and thought about it, found the solution, and fixed it, without stressing about falling behind. Yes, the design is fantastic and I think I’ve executed it well. But I’m most pleased with the construction–the small details that affect how the boot will sit on the last, or tiny elements inside that no one will ever see. I am proud that I’m giving myself the freedom to learn and be challenged without a deadline spurring me onward relentlessly, where I can make boots because I truly love doing it and getting paid to make them is a bonus and not the primary motivation. I am proud that I have worked hard to leave space for joy in spite of the presence of loss and grief.Of course, I still have to worry about whether or not they’ll fit. I don’t know of anything that eases that little bit of uncertainty, so that should keep me humble. 😁

It’s an unsatisfactory place to stop, but I’ve done the difficult part (sewing in the hard counter) and now I must go enter orders and pack boxes.

It took me far too long to understand that if I wanted laying soles to be easy, without the threat of ugly gaps or places that wouldn’t stick, I needed to neatly prepare the boots leading up to that stage.

I put these together completely in my head last night before I went to sleep, and in a historic first, I did not sew anything out of order this time. Please ignore the messy bench (I obviously am) and the yellow shoelaces (they’re just to hold the shoe together until it’s completed and I put in the correct shoelaces).

The cowboy boot top on the bottom has been completely stitched; the top one is only partially stitched. Please notice the importance of stitching for leather inlay and overlay. All of the tiny details and any hint of movement or light/shadow is conveyed with stitching.

Because you can’t blend or fade one color into another with leather inlay/overlay, I decided to attempt a color fade with stitching. The sun is orange and the band next to it is yellow, so I’ve covered the yellow with orange stitching. The band next to the yellow is pink, so I covered the pink with yellow stitching, and so on.
Leather inlay/overlay will never achieve the realism of painting, but it’s fun to push the limits of it and see what’s possible.

Wingtips and countertips for a future project. Wish me luck–so far I have successfully avoided doing a boot with a White or Bone foot.
