| | |  | Juniors' Shoes | Home » » » » Eclectic Shoe Goo | | | | | | Colors: | | | | | Description: | | Shoe Goo is a superior adhesive and sealant that easily and permanently repairs all types of footwear. It adheres to all kinds of materials, so use Shoe Goo to mend rubber soles, tears in canvas or leather tops or to stop shoe laces from fraying. It dries to a waterproof, flexible rubber, so it will repair waders and boots without breaking or cracking. Choose between Black or Clear. | | | Features: | |
• Contact Adhesive and Sealant
• Rebuild Worn Soles
• Coat Frayed Laces
• Seal and Protect Worn Boots
• Reattach Broken Heels
| | | Product Details: | | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 111 reviews |
| | | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 111 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
56 of 56 found the following review helpful:
An Amazing Product!Mar 08, 2009
By Robert M There are a handful of "miracle" products out there that end up exceeding expectations in a marvelous way. This is one of them. I picked up a tube of this stuff at the local "variety store" to re-attach the sole of a pair of nearly new Adidas running shoes (I'm not giving those 5 stars!). Two years later, the shoe is beginning to fall apart, but the sole, yes sir, is still hanging tough. I've used this product in a number of different applications where I used to use 100% silicon adhesive with the major difference that they NEVER need to be re-glued once glued with SHOE GOO. You better not want to un-glue what you apply this stuff to, because you won't. Anyway, quite the amazing product and a solid 5 stars. Every household should have a tube for those tough jobs.
35 of 35 found the following review helpful:
Here are the missing instructionsFeb 26, 2011
By Bore Duo
"nano cow"
Instructions:
(1) Make sure your Goo purchase is recent. The shelf life in your garage is not long. (2) Have both the shoes and Goo at room temperature. There are handling and curing problems if you deviate from this ideal. (3) Lay out more newspapers than you think and get a few paper-towels handy. (4) Buy a big bag of rubber bands unless you have quite a few sizes already (important). (5) Using a small wire-brush (toothbrush style is best) clean out the area to be glued. Do this outside. Get out all the dirt and sand, and also rough-up the surfaces. You can't glue to dirt, and any little pebbles will be in there forever. Shoe must be completely dry (place held open over a heater vent for 24-hours if need be). (6) Goo glue it up. Be generous, but not too generous. Be particular careful to fully coat both surfaces at the edges of the shoe. (7) Rub the outside surfaces to squish the Goo around inside the sole. (8) Start putting on the rubber bands. You need a lot. Space them every quarter inch or closer on the glued edge. (9) The shoe parts have a tendency to open up, even with the rubber bands, so check again in 10 and 30 minutes. Add more rubber bands if needed. (10) Let sit inside for 24 hours. Or more.
Voila! Fixed shoes.
I clean my fingers with paper towels. You might try something nastier, if you want.
PS: This review is not "certified purchase" because the SKU I bought seems to be discontinued on Amazon.
37 of 39 found the following review helpful:
Great Product with a Short Shelf LifeJun 11, 2008
By Donna K. Mcclish This is a terrific item to keep just about any sensible shoe and sandal bottom from wearing out too quickly. I've had great success with it.
Unless you are going to doctor-up a lot of needy shoes, athletic ones in particular, at one time, buy the smaller Shoe Goo size. Shoe Goo stored over an extended period of time loses most of its potency.
22 of 22 found the following review helpful:
no worriesApr 07, 2009
By Jamessobutka
"tanner city skin dog"
The best leather to leather adhesive i have ever worked with.Great on skin leather covering, apply to both surfaces and roll with nylon roller, no lift up whatsoever with rounded corners.Use spatula to smear, firmly.
15 of 15 found the following review helpful:
Fixes lots more than shoesAug 21, 2010
By York Gardener
"Love my flowers"
We've been using Shoe Goo for years. It can be used to a fill in a plastic product (use plastic wrap on aluminum foil to place across the void and provide structure while the Shoe Goo dries). We've repaired many a bird feeder, squirrel deflector, and feeder cover. One repaired after 1989's Hurricane Hugo lasted until 2009 when the original product completely deteriorated, but the Shoe Goo repair was still viable. We've repaired holes made by mice chewing into storage containers, fixed the ice receptacle in our ice maker, and we have even re-adhered the occasional sole onto a shoe. When something needs fixing, we reach for the Shoe Goo.
See all 111 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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