If you are wearing the correct type and size of running shoe but are not 100% happy with how the shoe fits or feels, you may benefit from a different lacing technique. Changing the way you lace your shoes can fix niggling shoe problems and transform an "OK" shoe into an "excellent" one!
Here
are a 5 common shoe problems and the lacing techniques that can help
alleviate them.
1. HEEL
SLIPPING (USING BUNNY EARS)
Problem:
The shoe feels loose around my heel
causing my foot to slip up and down in the shoe. If I tighten the laces to keep
the shoe on, the laces feel too tight and hurt my feet.
Cause: If you have narrow feet you may find it hard to find a narrow enough shoe. Men with narrow feet often find that wearing women’s running shoes can solve the problem. If you like a shoe with a wide toe box you may find that your toes feel great but you have too much room at the ankle.
Solution:
Create a more secure fit around the ankle without tightening the laces on the
entire shoe. You can achieve this with Bunny Ear Lacing.
Technique: Lace your shoes as you
normally do (using regular criss cross lacing or a using a custom lacing
technique). When you get to the top eyelet thread the lace straight up on the
outside of the shoe and bring it through the last eyelet leaving a loop.. Do
the same on the other side. Thread the opposite lace through the loop (on both
sides) and pull the laces to tighten them. If the shoes feel too constricting
using the 7th eyelet that is set off to the side (as pictured), use
eyelets in rows 5 and 6 instead. Alternatively, you can create the loop by
threading the lace back through the same hole on eyelet row 6 and then
threading the opposite lace through the loop. This will enable you to tighten the laces
at the ankle but not tighten the laces lower on the shoe.
2. HOTSPOT ON TOP OF FOOT
Problem:
My shoe rubs one spot on the top of
my foot. It may only be a
problem on one foot. It may feel like the lace is too tight but just in that
one spot.
Cause:
The shape of your foot or arch can
cause a hotspot on top of one or both feet. It may happen in all running shoes
or just in a specific pair of shoes that otherwise are great running shoes.
Technique: Lace
your shoe as you normally would until you reach the eyelet before the area that
is experiencing discomfort. Thread the lace through the eyelet above it on the
same side. Do the same on the other side. Continue lacing as usual. If the
problem is only on one foot then you only need to change the lacing on that
foot. It is OK to have both shoes laced differently.
3. HAMMER
TOES OR BLACK BIG TOE NAILS
Problems:
I have hammer toes OR I keep getting
black toes nails on my big toe.
Cause: Hammer
toes have various causes but shoes that push down on the top of the toe can
make the toes curl under more. Black toe nails are not always avoidable.
Running or walking long distances is an endurance activity and will put a lot
of pressure on your feet so some toenail problems are to be expected.
Solution: Take
as much pressure off the toes as possible. Lift up toe box to prevent toes
curling under. Ease the pressure of the shoe pushing down on the big toe.
Technique: Thread one end of the lace through the first eyelet on the same side as your big toe. Thread the other end of the lace up through the last eyelet on the opposite side. Leave enough shoelace here to be able to tie your shoes into a bow. Take the other end of the shoelace at the bottom of the shoe and thread it back and forth through the eyelets to the top. When you tug on the outside lace, it will pull the material above your big toe up and off your nail.
4. TOO
TIGHT ON TOP OF FOOT (USING PARALLEL LACING)
Problem:
My shoe feels too tight along the
top of my foot but if I loosen them, the shoe is too loose.
Cause: This
problem is often caused by high arches. The laces feel too tight along the top
of the foot, but loosening them makes the shoe too loose.
Solution: Use
parallel lacing instead of criss-cross lacing to take the pressure off the top
of the foot while allowing the shoes to be tightened securely.
Technique: Put the lace through the eyelets on the first row. On the big toe side of the
shoe thread the lace through the eyelet above it on the same side. Then thread
it through the eyelet on the opposite side (going straight across). Thread the
lace through the eyelet two rows above it and then straight across to the opposite side. Then
two rows above it on the same side. Repeat on the opposite side starting with threading the lace through the eyelet two rows above on the same side.Tie shoes as normal.
5. CRAMPED
TOES (USING DOUBLE LACES)
Problem: My
toes feel cramped but if I loosen my shoes, the toes feel OK but the top part
of the shoe is too loose. I have bunions and my shoes always feel tight across
the toebox.
Cause: The
may be caused by a foot that is wide across the toes but narrow towards the
ankle. This can also be caused by bunions or callouses on the foot.
Technique: Remove the laces and measure them. Buy two sets (four laces) approximately half
the length of the original laces. On each shoe, use one lace for the bottom
three eyelets and another lace for the upper three eyelets. You will have two
bows on each shoe – one half way up the shoe and the other at the top where you
normally lace your shoe. This will
enable you to tie the bottom laces looser without affecting the tightness of
the top part of the shoe.
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