Quanah

$695

These incredible boots are made of crocodile belly with lone star eagle stitching. The blacked-out colors can be worn with a suit or jeans and blends easy with your every day adventures.

We use no synthetic materials and every aspect is handmade (which is why this boot will last a lifetime). These details are important.

Lux-calf interior for glove-like comfort.  Full leather insole (for breathability and custom shaping to your foot). Classic Round toe. Uppers have Lone Star Eagle sitiching and 12" high. Heel is leather stacked 1 1/2”.  Soles are hand pegged with lemonwood.  Reinforced pulls.  

Our men's boots fit true to size.  If the majority of your shoes are a size 10 then order a size 10 in ours (its free to exhange if something is off).

Our Full Leather Insoles allow the Width to be Modifiable! They are built on a EE base and have a full leather insole that (when inserted) makes the boot a D width (normal).  So, simply remove this leather insert for EE (wide) width, or keep it inserted for D (normal) width.  They will conform comfortably to your feet either way.

Add up to 3 initials on the pulls (black, brown, or bone) to customize the boots.  Put the initials in the Order Notes.  We handmake these (inlay into the pulls) and it takes us 3-4 weeks to complete this.

---

These boots are dedicated to the last Comanche Chief Quanah Parker.  His mother, Cynthia Ann Parker, was captured by Comanches at age nine in an 1836 raid on Fort Parker in Central Texas, just east of modern-day Waco.  She became a full-fledged member of the tribe and fully assimilated into the culture.  She married Peta Nocona, the chief of the Kwahadi band of Comanches.  The community of Nocona was later named for him. Through many battles he earned the respect of the Comanche nation and refused surrender to the federal government.  By the 1880s, after securing land as a 'reservation', he entered into a contract with North Texas cattle barons Charles Goodnight and Samuel Burk Burnett to allow their cattle to graze on one million acres of their reservation lands for a fee.  He later became a rancher and the wealthiest Native American at the time.

 

Customer Reviews

Based on 8 reviews Write a review

最近查看的