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  2. Keds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keds

    Keds is an American brand known for its canvas shoes with rubber soles. Founded in 1916 by U.S. Rubber, its original shoe design was the first mass-marketed canvas-top sneaker. The brand was sold to Stride Rite in 1979, which was acquired by Wolverine World Wide in 2012. Since February 2023, Keds has been owned and operated by Designer Brands.

  3. PF Flyers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PF_Flyers

    The brand was first sold to P&F Industries, Inc, then to the Brookfield Athletic Shoe Company. [3] In 1988, Hyde Athletic Industries Inc. (now known as Saucony), planned to relaunch the PF Flyers brand through the acquisition of the Brookfield Athletic Shoe Company Inc., by first marketing the brand for kids before producing adult models. [4]

  4. Buster Brown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buster_Brown

    Buster Brown's association with shoes began with John Bush, a sales executive with the Brown Shoe Company; he persuaded his company to purchase rights to the Buster Brown name, and the brand was introduced to the public at the 1904 World's Fair. Little people were hired by the Brown Shoe Co. to play Buster in tours around the United States ...

  5. Lurchi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lurchi

    Lurchi is the advertising comic character of the German Salamander shoe factories. He is a fire salamander. His adventures are told (in German) in small booklets titled Lurchis Abenteuer (Lurchi's adventures). They are targeted mainly at primary schoolers, written in calligraphic handwriting in simple rhyming couplets.

  6. Hammerman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammerman

    Youth center worker Stanley Burrell (Hammer's real name) owns a pair of magical dancing shoes (which are alive and can speak), which when worn cause Burrell to transform into the superhero Hammerman. [3] He frequently gets advice from his "Gramps", who was a former owner of the shoes and was known as Soulman.

  7. Jeff MacNelly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_MacNelly

    He continued working in spite of his illness, producing Shoe and editorial cartoons and Dave Barry illustrations in his Johns Hopkins Hospital bed right up to the day he died, June 8, 2000. MacNelly's legacy is continued through the work of Chris Cassatt, Gary Brookins, Susie MacNelly, his head writer Bill Linden and Doug Gamble.

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