GoldenEraFan
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I have an NOS pair of Florsheims I got off eBay. Wanted to ask the shoe experts how old these are. Any tricks to dating Florsheim shoe's in general would be greatly appreciated
I managed a Florsheim store back in the 80s. They look very much like one of the basic styles they made then. There were 2 plain lace up oxford type styles if I recall correctly. They sold for about 39.99 when I started, and came in both brown and black. I think the names were, The Eton, and The Kent. So my educated guess would be that they were made between 1980 to about 1995. If there is a last number inside, you might be able to request some information directly from Florsheim, or whatever corporate entity it has morphed into today.[huh]
Yes, This is correct. Thanks for weighing in here with personal experience... nothing beats that! I had guessed 70's or later... mainly because I am sure they are post 50's and my interest in Florsheim shoes ends somewhere in the 60's (before these were made).
Just dug my Florsheim "Metros" out of the closet that I bought in 1987 or 1988 I believe. They have the same little oval window on one side inside, and the same sort of info (size, last #, etc.) on the other side. They are from the "Designer's Collection", so they have a slightly different logo on the insole at the heel stamped in gold, mostly illegible now though. Also, the words "Florsheim Designer Collection" are stamped into the sole right near the heel. They are made of kid skin, which was my personal preference. Your shoes are made of calf, if they are really The Eton style which I am almost certain they are. The Kent as I recall, was a plain toe without the top stitching, and a very nice basic business shoe in the same line. I think both these styles were geared for the up and coming professionals of the era as they were the most basic of styles, and the lowest priced shoes they offered at the time. I sold a LOT of them.
Just dug my Florsheim "Metros" out of the closet that I bought in 1987 or 1988 I believe. They have the same little oval window on one side inside, and the same sort of info (size, last #, etc.) on the other side. They are from the "Designer's Collection", so they have a slightly different logo on the insole at the heel stamped in gold, mostly illegible now though. Also, the words "Florsheim Designer Collection" are stamped into the sole right near the heel. They are made of kid skin, which was my personal preference. Your shoes are made of calf, if they are really The Eton style which I am almost certain they are. The Kent as I recall, was a plain toe without the top stitching, and a very nice basic business shoe in the same line. I think both these styles were geared for the up and coming professionals of the era as they were the most basic of styles, and the lowest priced shoes they offered at the time. I sold a LOT of them.
I tend to think the small cut out window with the word, Florsheim, is something that goes a long way back. I further think a few other shoe companies had a similar window with their name on the shoe the very same way, such as Allen Edmond. It would be interesting to find out when exactly Florsheim started the use of that on the inner side of their shoes.
However, I am still wondering about the other issue here, when did Florsheim stop using the gold stamped logo and swap over to the material labels? I do see on the inside of what we call the Kenmore, a while back the inside of the shoe would have a gold stamp on the inside that would say, Imperial Florsheim and on the bottom of the shoe, the soles would be five nail and the V-Cleet heel. I also note that some of the older Imperial Florsheim shoes had a few rows of nails on the following of the heel edge, instead of just a single row of nails.
More modern Florsheim shoes also do not have the "logo" for Florsheim on the shoes at all, and the heel plate areas just are stamped with the word, Florsheim, on the rubber.
The normal color for the small window on the inside of the shoe that says Florsheim is blue, but, my Husband had a pair of shoes in which that area was a red instead of blue.
All of this has to mean something along the time line for dating the Florsheim shoes.
There are so many things to learn about shoes in general, and it is so very sad that Florsheim Shoe Company turned to cheap shoe leather and outsourcing their manufacturing to India or where ever they have them made now...wish they would have kept things here in the USA and kept their quality up. For some time, Florsheim did keep records on things about their shoes, not sure if they still do or not?LOL. that site has a LOT of mis-information.
Start with this... "Florsheim Imperial shoes run true to size but since they are handmade, there is some variance especially in the 1960s models."
NOPE! Not "handmade" in the 50's or later, and only certain models were in 40's and earlier. That's just the beginning of the incorrect data.
Thank you for sharing this...super useful. Some non flosheim shoes that are in the early 1940's to late 1960's I can get help from our Cobbler, as he worked with his Father, whom was a Master Shoemaker, at the Shaw Shoe Company Factory in Coldwater, Michigan. Our Cobbler explained that back when many shoe companies were still up and running in Brockton, MA., would have large order runs, (including the Shaw line) and that a contract would be made to fill an order from another manufacturer. All the shops at one time were under the Union and in some ways that made one company make another company's shoe from time to time. BUT fires, mishaps and eventually the Union itself, ran the shoe industry under ! And also the way new ownership of some shoe companies got greedy and started to ship out orders from the USA to places like India, China, Viet Nam, Cambodia, and Mexico.I started buying quailty bands with Allen Edmonds. So by the time I was ready to try Florsheim they sold out and were manufactured in China. I now have AE, Hanover, Alden and Florsheim. They are all great, but I put vintage Florsheim at the top. The green stitching in the enterior is the way I decide if they are the quality version.
Below is a great website on many old brands. It even tells the Florsheim date codes, but the code only shows the month and last date number of the year manufactured, as they didn't want customers in the store to know the decade. They didn't want to let them know it was new old stock.
http://vcleat.com/florsheim-model-numbers-1950s-90s/