Category Archives: Art & Culture

Tune in this Thursday

3:15pm (Central) Thursday, 21 June 2007… Yours truly will be interviewed by Dan Gresham of KOLE Newsradio FOX 1340 & 1380 AM. It’s a 30 minute live call-in afternoon talk show heard throughout the Southeast Texas and Houston area.

Talk Line: (409) 835-1340 or toll free (866) 835-1340

And..thanks to the wonders of the internet, you can tune-in from your desktop by visiting http://www.newsradiofox.com/index.asp. (I’ve had the best luck using Microsoft explorer.)

So plan to tune in and call in with your cowboy boot opinions and questions. It’ll be fun!

Cowboy Boots in Kill Bill 2

If you don’t know the storyline… four years after surviving a bullet in the head, the Bride (Uma Thurman) emerges from a coma and swears revenge on her former boss and his deadly squad of international assassins. In one of her many misadventures, the Bride is buried alive…in a graveyard, in a lonely dark pine box, under six feet of dirt.

Lucky for her, she was buried with her boots on…and I’ve gotten quite a bit of e-mail from women wanting a pair just like ’em. So help me out here…use the comments section below. What can we tell from this valuable copyright-infringing clip?

  • Eagle inlaid on a two-piece top, right?
  • Star inlay at the collar.
  • Two rows of stitching on the eagle-wing inlay …or just one?

Who’s the maker do ya think? (I couldn’t see a label inside the boot. Can you?)

Click here for some fun facts about this movie.

Cowboy Boots on Display (Houston,TX)

As I’ve been bounty-huntin’ cowboy boots for my book… I’ve discovered that a handful of the boots I want to photograph are currently being “held hostage” in Houston’s Center for Contemporary Craft …part of an exhibit called COWBOY: Craft of the American West.

The show features handmade cowboy gear …including cowboy boots crafted by Ray Dorwart (Guthrie, OK), Stephanie Ferguson (Millsap, TX), Bob McClean (Sedona, AZ) and Gary & Clara McGlasson (Spokane, WA.)

Visit the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft before March 26th, 2006 ….or catch a glimpse of a few of the items included in this photo slideshow.

Otherwise you may have to wait until my book comes out next Spring!

Contact Numbers:

· Ray Dorwart (405) 282-1258 (Click here for website)

· Stephanie Ferguson (817) 341-9700

· Bob McLean (520) 281-0512 (…now at Paul Bond Boots)

· Gary & Clara McGlasson (509) 891-1756

(Photo courtesy of Houston Center for Contemporary Craft.)

Miniature Cowboy Boot

When I first saw this little boot made by custom bootmaker Carl Chappell, I was impressed.

Then, I learned little more …and I was absolutely amazed.

This tiny boot is accurate half scale size of a size 5.5 boot. It’s smaller than the trophy belt buckle it won in this year’s boot contest!

Not carved out of clay or cast in ceramic, this “replica” is made out of leather just like a “real” boot.

The cowboy boot took Mr. Chappell more than 60 hours of work. About the same time a full-size custom pair, but that doesn’t account for the additional 20-30 hours he spent making the specially-sized tools he needed.

He crafted a tiny crimping board, hot iron …as well as an inseaming and lasting jack.

The five rows of red and white stitching were sewn one-by-one, side-by-side, using a Singer 31-17 (manual .pdf) with a size 10 needle.

In order to get the look and feel of a quality custom cowboy boot, the kangaroo hide used for the boot top had to be reduced to half its normal thickness. The foot of the boot (vamp & counter) was made from the hide of a very young alligator, near animal’s armpit, in order that the hide’s “tiles” would be the right size.

(Click here for a slightly larger view of this miniature boot.)

What was the hardest part?

According to Chappell, it was stitching the sole. He filed the needle down on his 31-15 to create a special “hidden” sole stitch…one visible along the top of the welt, but not seen when looking at the bottom of the boot’s inked and buffed sole.

Oh, yeah…those tiny toe boxes weren’t easy either.

(Click here for more information about “How a Cowboy Boot is Made“)

Contact:

C.T. Chappell Boot Shop
Carl Chappell, Bootmaker
105 S. Main
Saint Jo, TX 76265
(940) 995-2901

Note: Mr. Chappell teaches bootmaking classes four times a year.

Photo of Carl Chappell taken by Randy Cooley, Oct 2005. (Thanks Randy!)

“Bootist” Walking Meditation

Instructions:

Wearing your favorite cowboy boots, take a walk to nowhere in particular. Listen to the sounds your feet make in your boots…across wood floors, across dry gritty dirt. Do not rush.

Be mindful of your walking, not your path. Enjoy your steps. Let the sound of your cowboy boots call you into the present moment. Yesterday is gone, and tomorrow is not here yet.

When we practice walking meditation, we arrive in each moment. Our true home is in the present moment When we enter the present moment deeply, our regrets and sorrows disappear, and we discover life with all its wonders. Breathing in, we sayto ourselves, “I have arrived.” Breathing out, we say, “I am home.” When we do this, we overcome dispersion and dwell peacefully in the present moment, which is the only moment for us to be alive.

As you begin to arrive with each step, you become more solid. As you become more solid, you become more free. Solidity and freedom are two aspects of Nirvana, the state of liberation from craving and clinging, fear, and anxiety. The practice should be pleasant. When you feel happy, your solidity and your freedom will grow, and you will know you are on the path of right practice. You don’t need a teacher to tell you if you are enjoying the practice. Allow yourself to be. –Thich Nhat Hanh