workbench with many kind of tools on it.

How does the shoemaker love his work? Heart and sole

Peter Limmer comes from a family of footwear makers. Today he crafts custom hiking boots with the tools, and in the shop, that his grandfather left him.

This story appears in the January 2020 issue of National Geographic magazine.

In 1939 a German-born shoemaker named Peter Limmer got the first U.S. patent for a “ski boot”—a stiff, square-toed leather shoe made to order. Today, gray-bearded Peter Limmer III hammers out about 200 pairs of hiking boots a year using his grandfather’s tools in the Intervale, New Hampshire, shop his grandfather opened. There’s a perpetual waiting list for the custom boots, priced at $775 and up; loyalists come from as far away as Tasmania for final boot fittings. Limmer, 63, still loves his work. “The best part,” he says, “is seeing customers dance in the driveway with their new boots on.”

<b>Lasting pincers: </b>These two blue-handled tools are part leather grabber, part hammer, used to stretch and form leather over a foot model.
Lasting pincers: These two blue-handled tools are part leather grabber, part hammer, used to stretch and form leather over a foot model.

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