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Friday, January 8, 2016

How to break in your new high heels. You can look pretty and your feet won't complain.

Have you ever fallen in love with your new shoes but your feet didn't agree with your new found love?


Yes! That has happened to me more times than I care to admit. It seems the more I love the new shoes, the more my feet complain.This is especially true when I find beautiful high heels and wear them without trying to break them in. My heart nearly leaps with joy at the beauty of the heels and I simply can't wait to show them off. My feet almost always complain. I try to ignore their complaints, but after a while, they complain so loudly that I am forced to pay attention, or at least attempt to find a solution that will please the both of us. If this has happened to you as well, you are in luck! I have posted below some ideas to help you break those new heels in so that you and your feet can be friends again. You can look gorgeous and your feet won't complain about your pretty new high heels.  

First of all, the trick is to try and tweak your new shoes a bit before you actually wear them. Here are a few simple ideas that might really help your shoes to feel great on your feet. 

1. Try to buy your shoes in the evening when feet are the most swollen. That will ensure a much better fit. Always buy shoes in your proper size to ensure the most comfortable fit. Wearing shoes that are either too large or too small will almost surely cause you pain. 

2. Give your new shoes a little test run to identify where problem areas might be. Try wearing them around the house to break them in a bit and try to mold them to your feet. Wearing your shoes for extended periods before breaking them in can really cause pain and blisters. 

3. Keep a bit of saddle soap at home to help break in your shoes. 
Run a clean cloth under water and wring out all excess moisture. Next, rub the cloth in a bit of saddle soap until it begins to lather a bit. Then rub the cloth over the area that rubs using a circular motion, covering the entire surface. Next, put the shoes on your feet. 
Why does this work? The saddle soap softens the leather so that it more easily conforms to the shape of your feet. 

4. If you have a place that is rubbing your foot in a certain area, dab a bit of rubbing alcohol on the inside of the shoe. Put on a thick pair of wool or athletic socks with your new shoes. The alcohol makes the leather more pliable and the heavy material of the socks works together with the rubbing alcohol to help the shoe take on the natural shape of your foot. You can dab the rubbing alcohol on the entire area of the inside of the shoe if needed. If you have no rubbing alcohol, try wearing a thick damp sock with your shoes around the house. This helps to stretch your shoe out a bit and helps the shoe conform to your foot. 

5. Place your shoes in the freezer overnight with a double bagged, water filled zip-top baggie inside the heel sections of each one. As the water freezes and the bags expand, your shoe will gradually be stretched out a bit, making the heels a bit wider and more comfortable. If you entire shoe is too tight, you can try the water bag on the inside of the entire heel. (Double bagging is highly recommended.) 

6. Use moleskin on the inside bothersome places of the shoe to keep it from rubbing. Some moleskin pads are meant to go directly in the shoe to keep a shoe from rubbing. 
Another way to use moleskin is to place the moleskin on your feet where your shoe is rubbing. Next, soak your feet and moleskin together in water. The moleskin will expand and will then create a thick barrier between your feet and shoes. Put the shoes on and wear them around so that the expanded moleskin can gradually mold the shoes more to the natural shape of your feet.  Moleskin is sold at most drug store or medical supply stores.

7. Try inserting a foam or gel comfort insole or foot cushion. They normally take on the shape of the shoe and offer increasing comfort of your shoe. Remember to take the time to buy the proper size insole for your shoes.  Some can be trimmed down to size for comfort. Heel cushion inserts can also be most helpful.  Many have an adhesive back so that you get relief of pain without slippage of the pad. 

8. If you are walking and identify an area that begins to rub your foot, you can rub the inside area with a solid deodorant stick or a candle. A travel size deodorant stick is a great thing to carry in your purse for emergency relief of foot pain.

9. Rub the bottom of your shoe with a piece of sandpaper. This helps to alleviate slippage when walking. Another "trick" is to put a piece of duct take on the sole of your shoe. This is temporary but helps with slick surfaces if you have no sandpaper. 


Now, what are you waiting for? Put on those new heels and try the tips above so that you can break your heels in and start showing them off. 

Monday, January 4, 2016

Monday's Musings: Tips and Tricks: How to use a bar of soap for home fixes. Save money and time!


Did you ever wish there was a simpler way to do things?
I have offered some great tips to help you simplify things below. 

Do you love simple tips? Well, if you do, here is one for you.
Did you know that there are more uses for a bar of soap than just to wash your hands or body?


Here are a few tips for using a bar of soap in some unique ways:


Keep Your Hands Clean While Working with Dirty In Dirt or With Dirty Items.
If you are not always the greatest about wearing gloves before doing a messy job, just grab a dry bar of soap. Before working in the garden, digging in the ground or handling oily car parts, simply scratch a dry bar of soap before getting your hands dirty. 
The soap will accumulate under your nails helping you to avoid dirt or buildup under your nails. Clean up is a cinch since all you will have to do is wash your hands and the soap will soften and bubble up and dissolve away rendering your hands much easier to clean. Using a nail brush when washing your hands makes the job really easy.
Fix A Sluggish Zipper
Another great soap tip that has really been of help at our house is for how to make a sluggish zipper work well. Someone is always complaining at my house that their zipper won't work. What is a gal to do? Well, you can try what I do, grab either a dry bar of soap (Or a candle) and rug the zipper in the area that is sluggish. This works like magic most of the time.

Fix A Spot On Your Shoe with Soap
Did you ever have a shoe that was rubbing your foot in one area?


 In a pinch, I have rubbed the area with a dry bar of soap. When I was young and this happened, my mother rubbed the spot with a bar of saddle soap. I don't usually have saddle soap lying around my house, but a regular bar of soap seems to work just fine. You could try this before moving on to other techniques. It has helped me several times.


Keep Wood From Splintering:
Ever drive a nail into wood only to have the wood splinter?

This is a common problem with a very simple fix. Before hammering in your nail, rub the long part of the nail down with a dry bar of soap. Then hammer in as usual. It will keep your wood from splintering.
Using Soap As A Deodorizer:
My last tip for today is to put soap into a mesh bag or even wrapped in a piece of cheese cloth and place in an area that needs to be deodorized. We use them in shoes, drawers, gym bags and golf bags. It is an inexpensive deodorizer that works, in my opinion, every bit as good as more expensive placement deodorizers.


I hope you will find at least one tip I have shared here today helpful. I have a lot of fun finding unusual uses for items around the house. Maybe one of my tips will become one of your favorites.
Thanks for stopping by my blog today.



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