Saturday, March 5, 2011

Are you wearing watered down shoes?

Chris posted "Where have all the great shoes gone?" on Nov 2008. Now step into 2011, more heavy discount , more cheap and no structure fitting shoes out in the market. I thought I should bring out this article, see if you have the same felling as I do?!

"Where have all the great shoes gone? "

Recently quite a few customers in the TCB Vein Store have been saying that there are no good shoes around (except in the Vein Store of course). In the city and the shopping centres all the shoes seem similar, bland, generic and of obviously poor quality. None of the stores anymore are offering interesting, attractive, original, well made shoes in good leathers. Why?

The answer lies in the principle that "Bad money drives out the good". It's a theory illustrated by economics Nobel Prize winner George Akerlof using watered down milk as an example. It's called Gresham's Law, after Sir Thomas Gresham, a sixteen-century merchant who persuaded Queen Elizabeth to restore the debased currency of England.

In the milk example honest, original-design, well crafted, high quality leathered, ethically made shoes are the
pure milk. Knock-off shoes made poorly and cheaply by unskilled workers of inferior and deceptive materials are the watered down milk. To the untrained naked eye, the pure shoes and the watered down shoes may look the same.

Imagine that a litre of high quality milk wholesales for $1.00, and a litre of watered down milk wholesales for
$0.60. An average buyer might willingly pay up to $0.80 for the watered down milk and up to $1.20 for the pure milk. In either case, mutual gains would be made from the transaction: Both the buyer and the seller know what he or she is getting, and both end up with what might be considered a fair deal.

But if the customer is unable to distinguish quality (and with shoes it is very difficulty for the average customer to distinguish quality), both grades of milk must sell for the same price - about $0.90.

Under this system, honest brokers of pure milk go bankrupt, while corrupt watered down milk sellers flourish. So, logically enough, soon all surviving merchants are watering down their milk and pocketing large profits, and consumers believe they are getting a bargain when in fact they are being ripped off.

The key factor is the knowledge gap between the buyer and the seller. The cheaper the goods, the harder retailers work to keep consumers from knowing the truth about them. And the more narrowly consumers focus on price, the easier they are to fool. Lately the trend is to fool customers about the product by using good design (knocked off) and good branding, imagery and store design. By using great photographers, models, knocked off good designs and clever branding, sellers are skillfully working very hard to not only keep consumers from knowing the truth about the products they sell...they are even preventing consumers from asking the hard questions at all.

If customers know the milk is watered down, there is no problem; they pay less for it and get precisely what they bargained for. Customers who prefer their milk without water can choose to pay a higher price. No one is cheated, no one is fooled. But when dishonest brokers add water to the milk and sell it for less without telling customers they have watered it, the unwitting public believes it is getting a great deal.

If enough dishonest merchants water their milk, more and more customers will forget what normal milk tastes like and buy only the cheaper watered down variety. Eventually honest brokers are forced to water their milk, too, or get pushed out of business. Pure milk becomes no longer available and even the price of watered milk goes up. Good money and good milk is driven out by the bad.

I've watched the same thing happen in the footwear industry. I see trusted brands selling PU (fake leather) shoes and labelling them genuine leather. I see them lining shoes in fabric instead of leather. I see them using the lowest grades of rubber on their soles...or worse, thin unsuitable leather soles. I see them making shoes in the poorest countries in the world by totally unskilled, contracted, per-piece workers that don't have the skills to make a pair of shoes themselves. I see them picking knock-off designs from factory catalogs and stamping their own logo on it. They've had to, or they will go out of business because the shop next door is deceptively selling watered down milk. And besides, it makes "good business sense" to sell watered down milk because the customer thinks they are getting a bargain but the seller makes more profit than selling pure milk honestly.

The result is, as explained in Akerlof's example, nearly all the merchants are selling watered down milk and many customers have forgotten the taste of pure milk. Those that have not yet forgotten the taste have been saying that there are no good shoes around (except in the Vein Store of course).

At Vein Wear, we only sell pure milk. How do we know? We milk the cows ourselves.

Nov 2008 by Christopher McCallum

And the winner of the Vein Wear Shoe Design Competition 2011 is...



The winning design, as voted by the public and then our judging panel is:

"Aero" by Jesse Bibbs of the USA.

Congratulations Jesse! We will get started on making your design a reality.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Style Magazine Chat with Sole Mister


SARAH MURRAY TALKS LACES AND LEATHER WITH SHOES DESIGNER AND OWNER OF VEIN WEAR, CHRISTOPHER MCCALLUM.

What are the staple shoes every man should have in their wardrobe?

Black lace-ups for business, tan or brown boots for denim, leather slides to avoid rubber thongs and something special... something no one else has that makes you feel on top of the world. Maybe some maroon nubuck loafers, or some purple deck shoes.

Why did you decide to offer a tailor made/bespoke shoe service?

It’s long been a dream of mine. Why should we have to choose from tame commercial styles that most shoe stores offer? If you want some patent red shoes, you should be able to buy them. Or if you want some tan boots with blue stitching, you’ll never find it... but you can make it. No other shoe stores in Brisbane make their own shoes, so they can’t offer a bespoke service. Ours are the same price as off the shelf shoes.

What is the most outrageous/interesting shoe you've ever had to create for someone?

We made a pair of perforated metallic silver shoes for one gent’s wedding. For a magician we made some pink snake skin shoes.


MAKE YOUR OWN SHOES AT VEIN WEAR
IN FIVE EASY STEPS
1. Choose a style.

2. Choose from over 70 different limited
edition leathers and apply them to the
panels of the shoe.

3. Choose your stitching, laces or
elastic, eyelet and sole colour.

4. Choose your sole material.

5. Wait for approximately three weeks
for your new, unique shoe

Please come to visit our stores or go online WWW.VEINWEAR.COM

Monday, February 21, 2011

Village News Socials


These socials snaps were taken at the Vein Wear Bespoke Shoes and Ray-Ban Rare party.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

The Courier Mall-Men Put Best Foot Forward By Laura Stead


MEN are taking the reins on their fashion choices - customising clothing and shoes to suit their every whim.

No longer the sole prerogative of the fairer sex, men's fashion and accessories are being offered up with an array of personalising options from colours to cut.

Peter Crawfurd, co-founder of online custom shirt store ShirtsMyWay.com there was a growing desire among men to have more input into their sartorial choices.

``We believe in individuality by letting men design their own shirts in true detail and getting shirts that are sized personally for them,'' he said.

Customers can choose their fabrics, buttons and shapes down to the collar and cuffs, as well as enter their measurements for shirts to be made to.

``The other point is that many men are picky with their dress shirts. They like certain collars or certain cuffs and want these for their shirts,'' Mr Crawfurd said.

``With the many design options we offer they can make these choices and get exactly what they want.''

Brisbane shoe label Vein Wear designer Chris McCallum recently launched a custom-design men's shoe service he said was in response to a growing demand from men to personalise their accessories.

``From a commercial point of view, what stores decide to invest in has to be quite conservative but it means that pretty much everyone doesn't get what they really want. It just gets boring,'' he said.

By choosing their own leathers, eyelet colours, laces and the most minute details on style, men can create their dream shoe with a three week turnaround, he said.

``We were getting requests from people requesting what they wanted and we thought let's just do it.

``So far we've had people in two camps - one is people who want something that's just not in stock, be it a bit more room in the toe for example, but the other camp is the guys that just go nuts with animal print mixed with purple nubuck to make something we'd never find anywhere else.''

``It's extremely exciting and no one else can really do it.''


Come in to Vein Store and customized a pair for yourself :)

Saturday, February 12, 2011

And the top 3 finalists in the Vein Wear Shoe Design Competition are...

The votes have been collated and we are excited to announce the three finalists of the 2011 Vein Wear Footwear Competition (in no particular order):

Ivan Bilugan (Philippines) - Retro Avant-Garde loafer
Jesse Bibbs (USA) - Aero boot
John Yang (Taiwan) - Indus boot

Congratulations to our three finalists and all the talented entrants. The standard was once again very high and this was reflected in the closeness of the votes.

Ivan, Jesse and John's entries will now be sent on to our prestigious juding panel, with the ultimate winner announced March 3.

Stay tuned...





Bride To Be Magazine Featuring Vein Wear Mens Shoes

Bride To Be Magazine Featuring Vein Wear Mens Shoes




Get these shoes online ($249.00) at VeinWear.com or come into a Vein Shoe Store to customise them in over 70 leathers.