![]() ![]() I ended up returning a few after I could not even sit in them for more than an hour. Staying in a shoe for 1 straight hour usually tells me more on whether I will wear them again or not more than a 2 min try in a shop. When I am watching tv or reading in the evening. I also started when I buy new shoes to just wear them to spend time with them around the house. Now my heels are neatly stacked in one of my work drawers and I walk in sneakers and change their. I do what pp does now: I gave up on the idea of commuting in heels. It happened so often to me that I try something in store on their plush carpets and it feels like walking on air, to walk 2 min in the street for them to start hurting. But you can't return them at this point since they've been worn outside.Īgree with this. Are your shoes tight and uncomfortable, or are they hurting your arches or the balls of your feet? If they're just tight, try wearing them with thin socks around the house for a bit to stretch them out. I make it a point to try new shoes inside on carpet for a few hours to test how comfortable they are. Seriously, this is so wrong and makes me very mad.Īnonymous wrote:Why don't you get a pair of shoes to commute in instead of wearing your heels on the metro? Because they have to take returned/garbage merchandise into account when they set prices.Īrgh. So when people like you do this, it makes the prices higher for all the rest of us. Your stance is particularly galling because obviously these shoes will have to be thrown out if returned to the store - even though they were not faulty. But you basically just decided you didn't like these shoes afterall. If you try it and it doesn't work, yeah, return the cleaning product. ![]() This is different than, say, buying a cleaning product that promises to remove blue ink from white cashmere. So it's not like a warranty feature on most products to the extent something fails to perform as advertised. Also, what is uncomfortable for you may be comfortable for someone else. The shoe was likely more comfortable, at least for the first 2 hours, than a pair from Aldo would have been. But no shoe can promise a miracle (comfort on the first day, walking up a hill). You bought shoes that you tested and you deemed them to meet your needs. ![]() I can't believe that returning the shoes is the consensus. What if you wore them to a wedding "just once" and returned them? It stinks that you lost money, but that's the way it is. Anonymous wrote:I think it's wrong to take back shoes that have been worn just because they are uncomfortable. ![]()
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