Seattle's Rubaiyat, sole survivors
of handcrafted footwear
THE HANDMADE mock Oxfords, in
cognac-colored calfskin, will be
Martin Stieglitz's first pair of
dress shoes in six years.
The retired Boeing manager has
chronic foot problems, yet he
wouldn't be caught dead in a pair of
orthopedic shoes. There was a time
when it seemed he was doomed to wear
nothing but athletic shoes, as he
did on a recent trip to Paris.
Then he heard about Melinda and
Louis Whisler.
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Wearable art:
Melinda and Louis
Whisler, shown here
on Jan. 17 in their
shop, Rubaiyat, in
Seattle, carry on a
40-year legacy of
designing and
handcrafting all
kinds of footwear.
"It's an art form, a
lost art form,"
Melinda Whisler says
of their trade. |
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"It's just impossible to find
dressier shoes off the shelf,"
Stieglitz, 64, said as Melinda
Whisler knelt at his feet, checking
the fit of the Bellevue, Wash.,
man's so-far-sole-less right Oxford.
From their cramped, cluttered
shop called Rubaiyat, tucked between
a barber shop and a Mexican
restaurant on James Street in
downtown Seattle, the Whislers are
carrying on a 40-year legacy of
designing and handcrafting sandals,
mules, pumps, Mary Janes, boots and
casual slip-ons.
With a 60-year-old Italian sewing
machine, a grind sander and decades
of know-how, the couple have brought
their "wearable art" in flamboyant
leathers and exotic skins to rock
stars, famous athletes and an
anonymous Microsoft executive — not
Bill Gates — who once ordered a pair
of red Superman boots.
Their shoes aren't cheap, but
they're made to last. And the
Whislers see themselves as "shoe
artisans," among the last of a dying
tradition of custom shoemakers who
still follow traditional methods
with a shared philosophy and social
conscience to fight what they call
"overpriced, throwaway shoes."
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Custom Made Shoes |
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"This is our small contribution
to what's real in a cardboard,
synthetic world," said Louis Whisler,
68. "We're trying to do something
with gravitas, something with
substance, something real in a
superficial world."
A love of shoes
Louis Whisler is the son of
Hungarian immigrants who owned a
shoe store in Ohio. As a young man
he worked for a large shoe company
and traveled around Europe, seeing
how some of the finest designer
shoes were made and bringing trends
from London, Amsterdam and Paris to
the United States.
In 1964, on a bus in Monterey, he
spied Melinda, a young San Francisco
Bay area native with an artistic
streak.
"Every time the bus would stop,
she'd slide into me and say,
'Whoops!'" Louis Whisler recalled.
They were married six weeks
later. They have seven children, and
their 12th grandchild is due in the
spring.
The husband-and-wife team shares
a love for shoes, so they blended
Melinda's artistry and Louis'
shoemaking know-how to build their
family business.
Eventually, the Whislers had
three stores in the San Francisco
area. During the years, they say,
they've shod rocker Tina Turner,
opera star Renee Fleming and
ice-skater Peggy Fleming; and they
put Grace Slick of Jefferson
Airplane fame into a pair of
reindeer boots.
But in time they were priced out
of the Bay Area. So they packed up
and headed north to Seattle in the
early 1990s, settling on Capitol
Hill. When rent there became too
pricey, they moved to their
440-square-foot spot at 219 James
St., around the corner from the King
County Courthouse.
In Seattle, their clients tend to
be lawyers, writers, artists and
other professionals looking for
unique footwear they're not about to
spy on another pair of feet.
Customers participate in the
design of their shoes, choosing toe
shapes and heel heights and
selecting from more than 80 colors
of leather — or lizard, alligator,
python, shark and stingray.
A pair of shoes usually takes
about six weeks to make and ranges
in price from $345 to $1,300 or more
for exotic skins.
Still, their $1,800 alligator
shoes are a steal considering stores
in Los Angeles and New York charge
$3,500 and up, Louis Whisler quickly
points out.
"We like selling shoes everybody
can afford," he said.
A thin layer of leather dust
coats everything in the tiny shop.
Melinda Whisler, 62, measures
customers' feet and uses a wax
pencil, butcher paper and a razor
blade to create shoe patterns. She
stitches the leather pieces
together, then passes the uppers off
to her husband.
He spritzes the leather with
water and lets it mull overnight in
a paper bag. Then, using pliers and
a hammer, Louis Whisler tacks the
leather upper to a form.
They take the forms home to their
Capitol Hill apartment and bake them
in a 110-degree oven for 20 minutes
to shrink the leather just enough so
that they will form-fit to the
customer's feet.
Finally, the bottoms are grinded
and the forms removed. Louis Whisler
pounds and glues the soles to the
bottoms and glues on molded, nylon
heels.
"It's an art form, a lost art
form," Melinda Whisler says.
"Nobody can do what she can do,"
Louis Whisler adds. "I do the
pick-and-shovel work — she's the
artist."
On Thursday, as Melinda Whisler
and Martin Stieglitz discussed
tweaks to his $550 Oxfords,
Stieglitz's wife, Ann, browsed the
shop. She picked up a red leather
pump with black detailing.
"There's nothing I wouldn't wear
in here — they're just gorgeous,"
she said. "I never knew there was so
much work, engineering and
craftsmanship (involved). This is
craft and skill."
The Whislers announced that
Stieglitz's shoes would be ready the
first week of February — just in
time for a trip to California.
Ann Stieglitz kissed the top of
her husband's head and smiled.
"You can take me out," she told
him.
"Ah, jeez," he said with a grin.
"Now I have to take her to an
expensive place."
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Rubaiyat at 219 James St. in
downtown Seattle Wa.
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open 9:30 a.m.to 6 p.m.
weekdays and by appointment
Saturdays.
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Information: 206-551-3986. |
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