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QUE SHEBLEY · THE FIT ATLAS
DESIGNED IN DEARBORN
MADE TO ORDER IN SPAIN

The
Fit Atlas

A bespoke shoe is a precise instrument. The difference between a pair that fits and a pair that nearly fits is measured in millimeters — and felt in every step. This is your guide to finding both.

12
Distinct Lasts
3
Width Standards
¼″
Half-Size Increment
· ON FIT ·

"A shoe should disappear on the foot. The customer should think only of where they're going — never of what they're wearing to get there."

— THE QUE SHEBLEY ATELIER
· I. · THE MEASUREMENT

Three readings. One foot.

Measure both feet — most people have one slightly larger than the other, and you should size to the larger. Measure late in the day, when feet are at their fullest, while wearing the socks you intend to wear with the finished shoe.

i

The Outline

Step 1: Trace your foot

Place a sheet of paper flat against a wall. Step onto it with your heel touching the wall. Holding a pencil perfectly vertical, trace the outline of your foot.

PENCIL HELD VERTICAL — never tilted inward. A tilt of even 10° will read as a smaller foot than you have.
ii

The Length

Step 2: Measure heel-to-toe length

From the outline, mark the back of the heel and the tip of your longest toe. Measure the straight-line distance between these two points — in inches or centimeters, whichever is most precise to your ruler.

A MILLIMETER MATTERS — record the measurement to the nearest 1mm or 1/16″. Round only at the very end.
iii

The Ball Girth

Step 3: Measure ball girth circumference

Wrap a soft tape measure around the widest part of your foot — across the ball, where the joints of your big and little toes form the broadest point. Pull the tape snug, not tight. Record the full circumference.

BALL GIRTH ≠ FLAT WIDTH — see the note below. This is the single most-misunderstood measurement in shoe fitting.
!
The Width Distinction. The width of your foot as it sits flat on paper is not the same as your ball girth. A foot that traces 4″ flat will typically have a ball girth circumference of roughly 9.5–10″, depending on the height of your instep. Our charts use ball girth — the circumference — because it is what determines how a shoe actually fits. If you cannot measure the circumference, you may estimate: flat width × 2.4 ≈ ball girth for an average instep. Higher instep, multiply by 2.5.
· II. · THE FINDER

Your size, by last.

Enter your measurements once. We will return your size and width across each of our lasts — because the same foot may take a different width on a wholecut than on a derby, and may sit differently in a sneaker than in a Chelsea boot.

Foot Length

Heel to longest toe. Use your larger foot.

Ball Girth (circumference)

The circumference around the widest part of your foot.

Or — Flat Width (if you cannot measure circumference)

We will estimate ball girth at ~2.45× flat width.

Toe-Room Preference

Bespoke shoes do not stretch in length — we recommend the middle option.

Enter your foot length and either ball girth or flat width to receive your size across each last.

· III. · THE ARCHITECTURE

A last for every silhouette.

A "last" is the carved form a shoe is built around — the soul of its silhouette. Each of our lasts has its own character: round or chiseled, sharp or generous. The same foot fits the same numerical size across all our men's dress lasts; what changes is the shape it takes.

Monti last
Monti
CHISEL TOE · ELONGATED

Squared, elongated profile. Sleek and architectural. Creates a generous "blind space" at the toe — the silhouette runs longer than the foot inside it.

Found OnOxfords · Wholecut · Single Monks · Patina dress shoes
Zurigo last
Zurigo
ROUND TOE · ALMOND

Almond-shaped toe, rounded and refined. Foot sits deeper into the shoe; less unused space at the tip. A classical, less assertive silhouette.

Found OnOxfords · Brogues · Derby · Classic dress styles
Saville last
Saville
REFINED · BALANCED

A measured profile — slightly elongated, but neither chiseled like the Monti nor as round as the Zurigo. The atelier's most versatile dress last.

Found OnHand Painted Patina · Single Monks · Most dress shoes
Belgravia last
Belgravia
BRITISH · STRUCTURED

Higher instep, slightly more vertical sidewalls. Holds the foot with quiet authority. A traditional last with English bench-made sensibility.

Found OnDouble Monks · Country styles · Selected derbies
Wellington last
Wellington
BOOT-FORWARD · TALL SHAFT

Designed for height. Generous instep volume to clear thicker socks; firm heel cup to anchor the foot inside taller boot constructions.

Found OnChelsea boots · Jodhpur · Chukka · Balmoral boots
Drake last
Drake
RELAXED DRESS

Wider, more forgiving than the Saville. A softer dress profile for full-day wear and casual dress occasions.

Found OnCasual derbies · Soft loafers · Selected styles
Sneaker last
Sneaker
SPORTING · LOW-PROFILE

Built for athletic silhouettes. Tighter toe-box than dress lasts — if you are between sizes, take the smaller.

Found OnLow-tops · Carola (women's) · Athletic derivatives
Penny Loafer last
Penny Loafer
UNLINED · US SIZING ONLY

A dedicated last for our penny loafer line. Available in US sizes only — there is no direct EU correlation due to the unlined construction's stretch behavior.

Found OnThe penny loafer collection (Kilzo, Mondayone, Tuesdayone, Wednesdayone, Office, Marew)
Drivers and Mocs last
Drivers & Mocs
UNSTRUCTURED · FLEXIBLE

Built for unstructured construction. Foot is held by the leather rather than a rigid form. Slightly snugger fit than dress lasts.

Found OnDriving moccasins · Unconstructed loafers
· IV. · THE WIDTH STANDARD

Three widths. D, EE, EEE.

Length is half the conversation. Width is the other half — and the half most often skipped by ready-to-wear brands. We build each men's dress last in three width tiers, calibrated to the ball girth circumference of your foot.

D
STANDARD
The Default

Our baseline width. If your ball girth measures within roughly 9.0″–9.9″ at a standard length, the D last will hold your foot without compression. The starting point for most clients.

EEE
WIDEST
The Generous

For feet that have always required wide-fitting brands. Adds approximately ⅔″ over D. Ample volume at the ball with a heel cup engineered to prevent slip despite the additional forefoot space.

A Note on Wholecuts

The seamless exception.

A wholecut shoe — Arabic Matrix, the Script line, our wholecut patina styles — is cut from a single piece of leather. There are no seams in the upper. This is the supreme test of a shoemaker, and the supreme test of a fitting.

Where a seamed shoe will give a millimeter or two as it breaks in, a wholecut will not. The leather may relax, but the silhouette remains. If your ball girth sits at the upper end of the D range, we recommend the EE width on any wholecut style. What feels acceptable in an oxford may feel restrictive in a wholecut.

· V. · THE FULL TABLE

The atelier's master chart.

The complete production specification — what the factory in Spain builds to. Switch lasts and units below to see the precise foot length and ball girth ranges for each size.

US UK EU JP FOOT LENGTH D — BALL GIRTH EE — BALL GIRTH EEE — BALL GIRTH
· VI. · WOMEN'S

For the ladies' atelier.

Our women's collection follows the same length protocol as the men's, but with additional vocabulary — the geometry of a heeled silhouette must be defined precisely. These three measurements determine the wearability of every heeled style.

Total Heel Height
The full vertical from ground to the back of the shoe — the figure that marketing pages typically quote.
Platform Height
The thickness of the sole at the forefoot. A platform reduces the steepness of the foot's pitch even when the heel is tall.
Heel Pitch
The effective slope of the foot inside the shoe — total heel height minus platform height. The figure that determines comfort and balance.
Heel measurement anatomy

A 4-inch shoe is not always a 4-inch shoe.

A heeled silhouette with a 1″ platform and a 4″ total heel walks like a 3″ heel. Marketing language often elides this distinction — we are explicit about it because it shapes how the shoe wears across an evening.

For all women's styles requiring exact measurements — particularly evening and bridal commissions — please contact the atelier directly for the full pitch and proportion sheet.

US UK EU NOTES
5.5336
63.536.5
6.5437
74.537.5
7.5538
85.538.5
8.5639
96.539.5
9.5740
107.540.5
10.5841
11.5942
· VII. · SPECIAL CASES

Notes on specific styles.

A few categories of footwear depart from the standard protocol. Read these carefully if you are ordering from any of the following lines.

i
SNEAKERS

Take the smaller half-size if between.

Our sneaker lasts run slightly longer in the toe box than dress lasts to allow for athletic movement. Customers who normally wear, say, a US 10 in our oxfords often find a US 9.5 sneaker fits perfectly — the foot does not need additional room because it is not seated forward in a stiff dress structure.

ii
PENNY LOAFERS

US sizing only — no EU correlation.

Our penny loafer last is built and graded exclusively in US sizes. Because of the unlined construction, the leather adapts to the foot in ways that do not map cleanly onto standard EU graduations. Order in US — your usual size — and refer to the master chart above for the corresponding foot length range.

iii
WHOLECUTS

Consider the EE width on borderline feet.

If your ball girth sits at the upper edge of the D range, the EE width is the safer order on any wholecut style — Arabic Matrix, Script, or wholecut patina. Wholecuts have no seams to give as the shoe breaks in. The relief you might find in a seamed oxford will not arrive in a wholecut.

iv
EXOTIC SKINS

Allow for a slightly firmer initial fit.

Alligator, python, and ostrich leathers are denser and stiffer than calfskin in their first weeks of wear. The shoe will arrive feeling more structured than its calfskin counterpart, then will relax into your foot over the first 8–12 wears. Order to your standard size; do not size up to compensate.