« Reply #18 on: Saturday 16 February 19 14:25 GMT (UK) »
to the best of my knowledge no one outside Bond Street in London has the knowledge to make boots or shoes.
James.
Not quite true James. Until about a couple of decades or so ago, Accrington & Rossendale College, Lancashire, used to teach shoemaking from design to the finished article and at the end of each year the students would exhibit their wares to the public walking along a catwalk modelling the shoes they'd made, usually colourful high heeled leather ones, which obviously needed a knowledge of engineering. At the time there were several shoemaking concerns in the Rossendale Valley (Lancashire). When government policy changed to providing more academic subjects, the tutor moved to another town, opened up his own premises and carried on teaching the skills needed to make shoes.
I'd like to share another memory with you. I'm from a large seaport in east Yorkshire. Back in the 1940s onwards I used to see a man sitting all day long in an ordinary bay windowed terrace house. He was a shoemaker sitting cross legged in his front window handmaking shoes. My brother-in-law was an upwardly mobile person and back in the 1970s he commissioned the shoemaker to make his shoes at a cost of an eye watering £60.00 per pair.
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