Florsheim Imperial Summit

Florsheim 93618 Summit

I have a plethora of shoes. That’s well established by this blog. But I want more. I am always looking for and wanting the next pair of shoes. Something even better. This gives me a bit of joy when I find a great pair. But my shoe wants also cause me problems (the Buddhist monks reading this are likely nodding their heads at this point). I don’t want to be that old guy who struggles to navigate his house because it is packed with shoe boxes. And has 12 semi-feral cats interspersed amongst them. And eats store brand ketchup as a meal. Because of this, I have a rule that I need to get rid of a pair of shoes to get a new pair (or an old pair (or a new old pair)). It’s an anti-hoarding measure and it is intended to keep me from this ketchup eating future.

This hoarding rule causes me anxiety though. Which pair? Sometimes it’s obvious that a particular pair needs to be voted off my shoe island but often it is not. Then I struggle. Why do I find it hard part with a handsome pair that I haven’t worn in four years? All of this (the buying and selling), must be some sort of disorder. I likely need some kind of medicine but I haven’t seen a pharma TV commercial showing a happy family frolicking at the beach and promising a life free of packing boxes (while a background voice quickly describes ominous side effects). Until pharma finds my chemical cure, I have this blog.



The shoes in this post are a rare pair of Florsheim Imperials. There are a number of rare Florsheim models but this pair is unusual because of the hand sewn band encircling the entire upper. The model was made for a year or two in the early 1960s. Below is a photo of the pair from a 1964 Florsheim catalog.

Florsheim Catalog

The style is very 1960s – modern and lacking any broguing. Sort of a whole cut blucher but having the hand sewn seam. It must have been a time-consuming (expensive), pair to manufacture.

Florsheim 93618 Summit

This is the only pair I have seen online or in person. I acquired the pair from my favorite source of high end shoes – the Goodwill. If you like the pair, you can check your local Goodwill but am fairly certain they won’t have another pair.

Florsheim 93618 Summit

The pair was obviously not new but had its original sole and heel. The sole is closed channel. The pair doesn’t appear to be Goodyear welted. The style of rubber/leather heel toplift is known (at least I know), to not age well. The rubber tends to disintegrate when wearing. But I haven’t worn them since they are too small for me.

Vintage Leather

The leather is described in the catalog as “Bairn Calf”. It was a term I had not heard of and when I looked it up on Google, I found no results. Bairn apparently is a Scottish term for child.

Vintage Florsheim

The upper leather was in fairly good condition. The leather was still soft and without any significant scuffs. It did have some patina from old polish. I decided to give the pair a glycerin conditioning treatment. I don’t frequently do this for my other shoes. Probably one in ten pair are treated with glycerin.

Glycerin Leather Conditioning

The glycerin treatment helped but it doesn’t reverse the aging effects on leather. Conditioning will help arrest further decay though. I followed up the glycerin treatment with a round of Bick 4 and then applied dark brown Saphir Medaille d’Or Cream Polish. And of course, I Sonicare’d the welt and applied dark brown edge dressing.

Vintage Florsheim Imperial

Below are some additional photos of the model. It will be in my collection until it is sold or I am cured.

Florsheim 93618

Florsheim 93618 Summit

Florsheim Imperial

Florsheim 1960

Florsheim Imperial 93618

Florsheim Summit




23 thoughts on “Florsheim 93618 Summit”

  1. Too bad such shoes are not commonly encountered on Ebay. But even if they were, they do not come in eee. Sad face.

  2. *hoarding – sorry to nit-pick but a horde is a gathering, to hoard is to accumulate. Love the blog.

  3. I want to shop at your Goodwill. To find even a beaten-up, not-my-size, India-made pair of Florsheim longwings is a thrill at the thrifts I hit.

  4. I have purchased a pair of split toe V-Cleat set in the edge of heel Imperial Florsheims. Trying to identify the year but I see no model number
    10 D 386247 2
    GA
    Any ideas ?
    Golden walnut brown. Pebble finish

    1. I saw your ebay post. That is a Florsheim Imperial 93619 from 1970. I don’t know why the model number wasn’t listed in the shoe.

  5. There is another pair on eBay right now with the same hand-sewn banding but they’re calling them 1960s magic tops.

  6. I have a pair of Magic Top’s but without the banding. Very smooth black leather with a simple wing tip design. Perfectly fitting shoes. They fit like a glove on me.

      1. Ouch! Sorry to hear on both counts. It’s both a rare model and an exquisite example of shoe making artistry the featured ‘hand stitched wall’ required.

        Handsewers were always the highest paid workers in Florsheim factories because of the required skill, but only the best of the very best would be entrusted to what was basically freelance stitching their way all around that low wall of the Summit last at precisely the right spot stitch after stitch after…

        Sure hope the new owner appreciates the find.

  7. Hello David. I recently found these in nearly new condition, and they are also quite comfortable. Definitely keepers. Thanks for educating me about this particular model, otherwise, I would not have known it existed. Your site is very well put together and very educational. Cheers, Thom

Leave a Reply to David Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *