Ramon Navarro - Custom Cowboy Boots and Shoes Forum
Transcription
Ramon Navarro - Custom Cowboy Boots and Shoes Forum
they love making boots? These questions and others will be treated in the following sections on a few of the masters of Texas boot-making. Ram6n Navarro: Ram6n Navarro is a man of 53 years. A sincere man of humble origins, Ram6n is soft-spoken and almost hesitant in his manner. Rather than boasting of his skills or dropping famous names, he prefers to let his art speak for itself. As it turns out, his art speaks volumes about his tremendous abilities. His fatheiowned a small cobbler's shop in rural Mexico near Guadalajara. It was here that Ram6n learned his craft and perfected the basics of shoe and boot-making. However, the boots that he and his father inade were not the fancifully ornate boots now common in custom boot-making. Rather, their boots and shoes were simple models made for a working-class market. Compared to his recent styles, these first forays in boot-making must seem very bland and almost rudimentary. However, it was in that small shop in the heart of Mexico that this great boot-maker developed the basic skills of excellence and pride in one's work. After growing up in Guadalajara, Ram6n moved to San Antonio where he worked for five years in various boot shops. Here he began to study the finer forms of boot-making and learn the difficult art of topstitching (embroidering the upper halves of the boots). His fortune led him to Austin in l97l when he heard of an opening at the legendary Capitol Saddlery. They needed an experienced man to help in the shop with Charlie Dunn. Naturally, Ram6n jumped at the chance to work under such a master of boot-making as Dunn. Dunn long enjoyed the acclaim of boot fanciers and power brokers who came from around the world to be fitted for a pair of custom boots. Ram6n learned much of the finest points of boot-making from Dunn and greatly benefitted from the great paradigm of Texas boot-making. When Dunn left in the early 1970s, Ram6n inherited the post of head bootmaker. He has been practicing and perfecting his art at Capitol Saddlery for nearly 22 years. His philosophy of boot-making reflects his humble upbringing. He contends that while one needs no special artistic talent to make custom boots, the greatest necessity is that you enjoy crafting boots. He dismisses with a shrug any comment that supposes supernatural boot-making powers that he may have. The greatest reward in making a pair of boots is that the customer is satisfied. "It's not really the way you make them [a pair of boots], it's the way people want them to be lthat is important]."" Ram6n is capable of doing any facet of boot construction, but he prefers top-stitching. He has unique designs of his own that he uses as well as customer requested ones. His real motive for doing top-stitching, he confessed, is that "the guy who does the bottoms gets dirty all the time, and I don't like to get all dirfy."'n Ram6n emphasized that boot-makers, in general, know one another and have a friendly sense of competition and mutual admiration. No true rivalries exist because everyone is able to fully appreciate the work of the others. Also, custom boot-makers are often so backlogged that no one worries about a shortage of orders. Custom bootmaking is one of the few occupations in which one can freely enjoy one's work and the work of others. It is somewhat obligatory to ask custom boot-makers which famous people they have made fitted for boots. Ram6n grudgingly provided a few names of state legislators and officials, some West Texas oil men and a number of notable Mexican politicians. Some prominent entertainers include Harry Belafonte and Henry Fonda. His favorite story is when Cheech Marin (of Cheech and Chong) came in to be fitted for boots. His fiist movie had just been released and no one knew quite who he was. Ram6n tried to convince him to buy some of the cheaper stock boots because it looked like Marin did not have enough money to afford custom boots. Finally, Ram6n gave in and began to make the black ostrich boots (with a $500 price tag). In the end, the boots were mailed to Marin at his Malibu home with an apology from Ram6n attached. Navarro, APril 14, 1993. 30lbid. In the late 1970s, the rage for boots was at its height. Ram6n remembers how the orders piled higher and higher as boots took over the fashion world. Lately, he notes, styles have turned toward highly ornamented boots with detailed stitching. Also, the short-top boots of the 1940s and tr950s are making a comeback. That this return to the past should happen is inevitable. Also of significance is the rise in orders from professionals and politicians. As the 1980s began, Texas businessmen tried to find a distinctive emblem that would be accepted in the realm of finance, law and other fields. They found this emblem in the boot, which has now become part of the standard "uniform" of Texas business and politics. Ram6n continues to work with a f9w helpers at Capitol Saddlery five days a week. They turn out about 15 pairs of boots weekly. Prices begin at $500 for a simple calfskin boot with minimal stitching. Ram6n, like most boot-makers, is totally committed to excellence in his craft. He prides himself on the fact that in his 21 years at Capitol Saddlery, only one pair of boots has ever been returned by a dissatisfied customer. His dedication, his skill, and his art all contribute in making boots that are beautiful in form and function.