Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Are you a reenactor? Shop Fugawee's line of Colonial shoes and boots for men. We ship across the US and to Canada. Click here to browse our selection!
Fine historical footwear and reproduction shoe accessories, designed for costumers, reenactors, theatre, film and historically inspired brides.
Crazy Crow's 18th Century Colonial Shoes for Men with Buckles are patterned after the shoes of the last half of the 18th century. Our new men's colonial shoes are designed for civilian or military wear from the French & Indian War period up through the Revolutionary War.
For a wide selection of women's historic Colonial and Victorian shoes, shop with Fugawee. We ship to VA and everywhere. Browse our selection here!
Finding the proper historic footware for your 18th Century reenacting, historic interpreting, or living history event is essential to walking with confidence. Our riding boots, colonial shoes and buckles are all historically accurate and crafted with quality.
Step into Colonial America with accuracy, elegance, and well fitted footware. Our historically accurate 18th century shoes come in a wide variety of styles. Whether you emphasize comfortability or high fashion, we have an option that suits your persona.
Cordwainer was the title given to shoemakers. Cobblers were those who repaired shoes. The cobbler had as much as five years less training than a cordwainer. In most countries, including the American colonies, cobblers were prohibited by proclamation from making shoes.
American calamanco shoes, manufactured in large numbers in Lynn, Massachusetts, and elsewhere, in a small way came to represent Colonial economic independence, versus being tethered to the yoke of trade dominance by Great Britain.
Leather colonial buckle shoes with brass buckles. Perfect for 18th and early 19th century, these have leather soles and are smooth out.
The Colonial Shoe is a low quarter shoe for the late 18th Century. These reproduction shoes are based on recovered examples from a New York area military camp as well as our most recent research. Information may be found in Sketchbook '76, sunken ships, and originals from private collections.