Anonymous ID: 0c8045 Aug. 19, 2018, 2:01 p.m. No.2669498   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9693 >>9868 >>9959

New Dig on “Red Shoe Gang” for Anons to Ponder

 

I took another look at all the men in red shoes @ JP party. I noticed on closer inspection they seemed to be made of very expensive ‘soft’ leather, with a squared toe. Near all (Tony Podesta seems to have different shoe style, i.e., pointed toe) seem identical one to another. When I noted this, I knew I had seen these similar shoes up-close, somewhere before. (Pics related) They are having them made (it seems) by the Popes own cobbler, Adriano Stefanelli in Rome. They are identical to Pope Benedict’s pair. But it is the type of leather used that interested me the most…a soft delicate leather.

I do not know if what has been implied about children being used could be true, or if a cruel rumor. However, these shoes are made of Morocco leather (says the article), which is…aka KIDSKIN…KID LEATHER. Info below.

All I can say is…Coincedince? All roads lead to Rome?…” Symbolism will be their downfall.”

“As it turns out, the shoes were made by Italian Adriano Stefanelli, whose other clients have included Barack Obama and Ferrari.” [So he does do special custom orders. Cartoon depicts Prince Charles ]

I feel at least we now know who/where the shoes may be coming from. Maybe a dig should be on Adriano Stefanelli. Whatever the final outcome, the terminology (below) remains ‘chilling’, i.e., lambskin, kidskin, chickenskin (chicken is a pedo term for a small very young child), knowing the subject matter, whether it is a ‘play on words’, or something more. A good lie always has its truth. The “Why” and When” questions still remain. Maybe Q will give us more hints.

 

https:// www.messynessychic.com/2018/02/07/the-truth-behind-the-popes-ruby-slippers

 

Kidskin or kid leather is a type of soft, thin leather that is traditionally used for gloves (hence the phrase 'kid gloves,' used since at least 1888 as a metaphor for careful handling).[1] It is widely used for other fashion purposes such as footwear and clothing. Kidskin is traditionally made from goatskin - more specifically, the skin of young goats (or 'kids'), although equivalent leathers such as lambskin and chickenskin (actually a form of calfskin) give the same effect.

Allen, Frederick J. (1916). The Shoe Industry. Рипол Классик. pp. 96–97. ISBN 9785874447977.

https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kidskin

 

Morocco leather (also known as Levant, the French Maroquin, or German Saffian from Safi, a Moroccan town famous for leather) is a soft, pliable form of leather widely used for gloves and the uppers of ladies' shoes and men's low cut shoes, but traditionally associated with bookbindings, wallets, linings for fine luggage, and the like.

Originally Morocco leather was imported to Europe from Morocco, and from the late 16th century it was valued in luxury bookbindings in Western countries because of its strength and because it showed off the gilding. It was also used in the Islamic world from an earlier date.

The finest grades of Morocco leather are goatskin, but by the late 19th century other skins often were substituted in practice, particularly sheepskin and split calfskin. For example, French Morocco is a variety made of sheepskin. The tanning process varied widely, but the traditional tanning material was sumac. The traditional tanning process was skilled and elaborate; according to the application, the preparation either would aim for a carefully smoothed finish, or would bring up the grain in various patterns such as straight-grained, pebble-grained, or in particular, in a bird's-eye pattern. Morocco leather is practically always dyed, traditionally most often red or black, but green, brown or other colors also were available, and in modern times there is no special constraint on color.

 

https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sumac [Very interesting, this]

https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morocco leather

Anonymous ID: 0c8045 Aug. 19, 2018, 2:25 p.m. No.2669735   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2669587

I keep going back t this old man in the paintings. The flooring (tile work), all the hanging straps with buckles…keeps reminding me of a hospital…an asylum maybe, or a mental health lock-down wing of a medical facility where they would have 'restraints' just hanging around. Does the Mayo Clinic have a mental lock-down wing?