Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never seen this. Are these dress shoes or sneakers? Do you have a picture? I don’t see how they could walk.
Without showing the full person this is just an idea, in reality imagine this kind of foot not on a towering guy but on a 5' guy, and you can bet that his toes end where the horizontal line connecting the top is Not a tad further.
Anonymous wrote:No, I sell mens dress shoes, and pretty much every guy that comes on is trying to get shoes at least a full size too big. And young guys in Nikes are wearing them 2 or more sizes too big. 5'10 skinny teenagers thinking they need a 14 isn't uncommon. I've put kids wearing 13s and 14s in Nike into 10s or 11s in Johnston and Murphy or Ecco. A bad salesman that just gives people the size they asked for would be selling these kids dress shoes that are literally 4 sizes too big. The main problem is that the vast majority of men, especially young men, don't know how leather dress shoes are supposed to fit. They want "room" in the shoe. And then it rubs and they think dress shoes are inherently uncomfortable. Basically, American men just need someone to teach them how to properly size shoes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never seen this. Are these dress shoes or sneakers? Do you have a picture? I don’t see how they could walk.
Without showing the full person this is just an idea, in reality imagine this kind of foot not on a towering guy but on a 5' guy, and you can bet that his toes end where the horizontal line connecting the top is Not a tad further.
Anonymous wrote:The other issue is that guys are trying on dress shoes not to see how they fit but to test the comfort. A proper fitting, quality, full grain dress shoe should not be real comfortable when you first try it on in the store. It should feel tight across the sides and the vamp. To get the best, comfortable fit, the shoe needs to stretThrch to form to the shape of the foot. Buying a quality shoe, tight with the toes not touching the end and the heel firmly held in place will leave you with a comfortable shoe that will last years, even decades. But the first two weeks probably they should feel pretty tight. Basic rule of thumb with leather dress shoes, if you don't have to use a shoehorn to get a new dress shoe on, then it's too big