high heeled black oxfords (shoes), plus some other stuff

I’ve made some new shoes!

These have had a bit of a journey in the making, with a gap of about five months in the middle of it when I did absolutely nothing to them!  Several things; feeling torn as to the colour I’d chosen, as well as a little overwhelmed with the thought of actually finishing them, when it was actually all pretty quick and simple and painless once I got over that…

So obviously, they’re black.  However! my original plan back in December of last year was to make some two-tone saddle shoes.  I cut out my pieces using the same beige upholstery suede that these shoes are made in, and dyed the pieces respectively caramel brown and “black”, though the latter turned out to be more of a deep charcoal really.

I thought the combo would be pretty cool… but once I’d formed them on the lasts and it came time to sole and add heels, I was starting to go off the saddle idea already.

I already suspected that what I really wanted was for some plain black heeled oxfords in my shoe collection… but it was summer at the time, too hot for winter shoes to be a tempting project anyway, and truthfully?   Christmas had exhausted me a bit and it just all seemed too hard, so I just chucked the half-made shoes into a drawer and basically didn’t touch them again for the next five months…

Fastforward to last week; winter has started to creep in with cold, probing tentacles, and with it the need for warm shoes.  I got the half-made saddles out of the drawer where they’d lain, idle and ignored, and re-assessed.  Carving the heels was the next step, that had been such a stumbling block to me, and really? it’s not that hard of a one.  I bought some wood from Bunnings, got Craig to help me set up the sander on the triton, and sanded myself some heels… hilariously to me, after all that procrastination it took about an hour, tops!  Soled my shoes, glued and nailed on the heels.

oh hey Clara!! and NO, lovely girl…. these are NOT for eating!

I painted the heels with a coat of black satin enamel paint.  I probably should have just painted the whole shoes themselves at this point too, but I still had that tiny shred of uncertainty that I might still want saddles …?  but nope.  Seeing the heels painted a beautiful pure black made the dyed suede look quite muddily unattractive, banishing all doubt.   I went right ahead and did a few more coats taking in the whole shoe, using the same black enamel paint.  Bunged in a foam insert, covered with the same chocolate brown suedette that I’d used to line the uppers, and FINALLY FINITO.

I’ve worn them four days straight already!  A coupla times they’ve got drenched in the pouring rain… in the past this would have filled me with horror but nowadays I have more confidence in the strength and durability, and importantly the waterproof-ness of my shoes! and of course they’ve held up beautifully.   Seriously, I’m totally chuffed! could not be any happier with them!!

Having said that, well of course theoretically I could actually be happier… they’re not perfect and I can certainly see little bits that I could have done better.  But with each and every pair of shoes I really do feel like I’m improving – to see my shoe-making journey, it’s all here under the tag “shoes” – and these ones are very satisfying to me.  They are exactly what I want to wear right now!

This is how I wore them for their maiden voyage… out to lunch on Friday with my friend J, and then later on to book club with a larger group of my friends… I felt pretty cool and chic!  No one asked me if I’d made my shoes! which means any one of three things; they look OK enough to pass for rtw (yay!) or SO bad that people are just too embarrassed to say anything (not-so yay).  The third and most likely option is that no one actually noticed them.  I’m ok with that option, to be honest  😉

Details:

Dress; V1351, floral chiffon, details here
Cardigan; the Miette, a free pattern by Andi Satterlund, all details here
Tights; my own pattern, details here, and my tutorial for making your own custom-fit tights pattern is here
Shoes… MADE BY ME!!!!!

SO, while I’m here and writing stuff… I’ve been making some other things lately too, that I haven’t got around to mentioning so far.

I discovered this pattern for little sockettes that you wear with ballerina flats; the Sytt & Prytt Florens Ballerina Socks, designed by Lena Lundvall.  I found this through a mention from someone doing me-made May on instagram, though for the life of me I cannot remember who it was.. so if that person is reading this then I’m sorry not to give credit!  Anyway, I looked up the Sytt & Prytt Etsy shop and bought the pattern.

 

 

This blue pair is made up exactly to the pattern; my toes are covered… JUST

It’s a super quick and extremely easy thing to make, though I altered the pattern somewhat to make them exactly what I wanted…  specifically, the socks as they are quite “skimpy”.  To be fair, I think this coverage is perfectly adequate if you’re wearing them with ballet flats, which is totally what they are designed for.  However, for me personally, I’m really so not a ballet flat person, and I wanted to wear them with my oxford shoes, that have higher sides and cover the top of my foot too, and so I wanted my sockettes to have more foot coverage too.

I wanted EXTRAAAA!!!

Adding on a good inch nearly all the way around and reducing the elastic length gave me this!  much better suited to the kind of shoes I wear.

my white oxford shoes, blogged here

I made nine pairs overall, including my trials runs, which I’m still going to wear, ‘cos it’s not like anyone can see the less-than wonderful ones in situ.  With the exception of the white ones, which is fresh fabric, the others are all made from old Tshirts.

Thanks for helping me with my pictures, Clara!! xxx

And finally… !

I made a toiletries bag for a friend for her birthday, using the dopp kit pattern from the Grainline Portside Travel set… I’ve made quite  a few of these, see my previous versions here.  The cool crackle print is cotton canvas hand painted in Zambia, I bought it at the Fabric Store in Melbourne during my holiday there with Mum and Cassie, and made a skirt for Cassie for Christmas.  This is the very last of it!

I lined it fully with plastic waterproof stuff from Spotlight, and made little zip pulls for fun, using beads and earring wires leftover from my jewellery making days.  I think it turned out pretty cute, and my friend professed herself very happy with it too  🙂

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37 Thoughts on “high heeled black oxfords (shoes), plus some other stuff

  1. Anita Steiner on 28/05/2018 at 7:33 pm said:

    Love your shoes and the toiletries bag looks very neat as well. Regards from Basel, Anita

  2. Those shoes! And thanks for sharing the sockette pattern, I wear these all the time and hate when the crappy elastic goes! Cc

  3. You are an inspiration!

  4. I’m still in awe of your shoes! And thanks for the info about the sockette pattern. The extra bony protrusions on my feet that make it so hard to find shoes means that those type of socks never stay on either. And I do have a few pairs of shoes that these would be useful for!

    • Carolyn on 06/06/2018 at 10:36 pm said:

      thanks Becky! The good thing about making your own is that you can customise them to suit the size and shape of your own feet, as well as to suit the shoes you wear too, win win!

  5. Naia on 28/05/2018 at 9:17 pm said:

    Lovely shoes; you are such an inspiration. I may try the sock pattern. Do they stay on you feet? I have purchased a few pairs to wear with oxfords and they bunch up as soon as I start walking. I knit a sample last night and it wouldn’t even stay on while sitting on the sofa so I chose not to knit it’s pair. My feet are very narrow and small; not sure if this is the problem.

    • Carolyn on 06/06/2018 at 10:39 pm said:

      thank Naia! The ones I made using my altered pattern stay on well for me, and I reduced the length of elastic considerably; both to adjust for the lesser circumference due to raising the height of the sides, and also tightens them around my feet too. It’s an easy pattern to play around with to work out just what you want for your own feet 🙂

  6. those shoes are fantastic. Do you have to buy a different last for any different heel height? As for saddle shoes, oh yes – I love them. how about a traditional pair- which to me is the coffee and cream color combo, with a thick sole to wear with jeans?

    • Carolyn on 06/06/2018 at 10:42 pm said:

      thanks Beth! And yes, you do have to buy a different set of lasts for different heel heights. I have two sets, one for this higher heel and one for flat heels. I love the thought of a coffee and cream colour combination for shoes, sounds beautiful!

  7. I LOVE your shoes!! You are so inspiring, I feel like even I could give shoe making a go! 🙂 I love that you made your socks out of old t-shirts. Reuse at its best!

  8. Great pair of shoes! Goes with anything and totally passes as rtw! 🙂

  9. Love the shoes!☺

  10. Love the shape and heel height of your latest shoes! It’s been so fun to watch your skills grow. Your shoes really do look professional now.

  11. Pencil Girl on 29/05/2018 at 11:50 am said:

    New shoes! (Squeal!) They look fabulous! I am so impressed. And to think of Sewing up some sockette/footies to wear with them…but, of course! Nice work! 🙂

  12. your shoes look terrific! love it. and thank you so much for the sockette link, I’m definitely going to look into those!

  13. Great shoes!
    I love the little socks too – even more so since they are reusing fabric. Do the seams irritate? (I hate seams under my foot).

  14. Adore your new shoes!!! Perfectly perfect in every way! Though they looked nice in the combo colors, the all-over black is a classic and fabulously fabulous worn with your black tights!! And the ballerina socks are the best! My daughter loves to wear those and I’ve never been able to because they peek out of my shoes in an unsightly way…. never occuring to me to make my own. Duh! And of course the travel bag is the best. You pick out the most fabulous fabrics and with the added ‘jewelry’ you’ve made a treasure for your friend. 🙂

  15. Your shoes are fantastic!!! I’ve been wanting to create my own shoes for a while now. But I haven’t been able to find outsoles/heels/etc to purchase. Where do you buy yours? I hope this hasn’t been asked yet; I took a quick look in your blog but I can’t find any mentions… Thank you in advance and keep rocking those Oxfords! 😀

    • Carolyn on 06/06/2018 at 10:50 pm said:

      thanks Karin! I usually list where I buy everything for my shoes, I must be getting slack with this post… 😉 I use rubber sheeting from which I cut my soles, and pieces of wood from which I carve my heels. I buy both of these, and the contact adhesive, in fact MOST of my shoe components: from Bunnings, a local hardware store here in Australia. If you click on the tag “shoes” all my previous shoe-making posts will come up and I go into a lot more detail on exactly how I put the components together to make my shoes 🙂

  16. Another pair of perfect shoes! Love your Clara skirt!

  17. Amazing lady! I am just stunned as ever that you are also making your own shoes. These look fabulous. x

  18. That heel is perfect – high but wearable. So chic with back tights. Well done for finishing them. Jo x

  19. Those SHOES. It’s definitely the first thing you said: they look more than good enough to be RTW. I can’t imagine anyone I know making anything like them! Shoemaking is so cool. And loved the recycling socks too.

  20. Lori on 15/06/2018 at 2:56 am said:

    Love the shoes and socks. Funny your wondering if they look just like RTW or not… I say to my husband sometimes that I’m happy people can’t tell I’ve made my own clothes and he says what’s wrong with clothing looking homemade. He doesn’t get it and I can’t explain it to him but I get exactly what you are saying. Your shoes look as good as RTW but better because they are handmade.

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