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  2. Boot jack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boot_jack

    The boot jack has several advantages over the removal of boots by hand. By allowing the wearer to pull their foot straight up and out of the boot, and by using their full body weight to hold the boot in place, far greater leverage and a much more secure grip are possible than can be achieved with the hands. In addition, the wearer is spared the ...

  3. Shoehorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoehorn

    A metal shoehorn A shoehorn used to don a pair of loafers A heavy duty long stainless steel shoehorn used to don safety footwear. A shoehorn or shoe horn (sometimes called a shoespooner, shoe spoon, shoe schlipp, or shoe tongue) is a tool with a short handle that flares into a longer spoon-like head meant to be held against the inside back of a snug-fitting shoe so that a person can slide the ...

  4. Jiagun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiagun

    Brodequin is an obsolete English name for a buskin or "a high boot reaching about half-way up the calves of the legs" , and named a type of wooden torture boot. Chinese-dictionaries and books generally describe jiagun: "an instrument of torture for compressing the ancles" (Morrison 1815, 588)

  5. Hobnail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobnail

    Hobnailed boots (in Scotland "tackety boots") are boots with hobnails (nails inserted into the soles of the boots), usually installed in a regular pattern, over the sole. They usually have an iron horseshoe-shaped insert, called a heel iron, to strengthen the heel, and an iron toe-piece.

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  7. Galoshes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galoshes

    Galoshes are overshoes, and not to be confused with the form of large slip-on rubber boots (known in the United Kingdom as Wellington boots). A protective layer (made variously of leather, rubber, or synthetic ripstop material) that only wraps around a shoe's upper is known as a spat or gaiter.