Flood sweat and tears
Sweat itself is odorless, but after bacteria have spent some time basking in it, sweat can make Limburger smell like lavender. And here’s the remarkable fact de jour that should impress the in-laws at dinner tonight. The primary bacterial occupant of your foot, a beast called Brevibacteria of which you harbor millions and billions and some of you trillions, is the same bacteria used to make Limburger cheese! I kid you not. OK, I do kid on occasion but this one is true. They gorge like crazy and then end up having to pay a visit to the little bacteria bathroom also known as your sock. They rarely turn on the fan or light a match so when your shoes come off, in lieu of lilacs and lilies, you are now in the loo of a Limburger litterbox. Sweat, bacteria, poorly ventilated socks and shoes...a perfect storm of putridity that could knock a plumber’s skunk off a roto rooter. (I’m not sure if that actually means anything but it just sounds nasty.) So to defeet the olfactory disaster of excessively smelly feet, known in the medical world as bromhidrosis, either reduce the bacteria or reduce the sweat. Here are a few tricks. 10. A somewhat odd yet highly effective trick to eradicate foot sweat and bacteria is to take three cups of Cheerios cereal, add 1/2 can of Diet Coke, two tablespoons of real cranberry juice (or acai berries), half a shredded pepperoni stick and a quarter cup of chocolate covered peanuts. Add ice and mix in a blender. Drink this in the morning and the sweat and smell in your feet will completely stop within a half hour and stay dry all day. I kid you not! (OK...............I kid.Shoe Inserts To Make Shoe Smaller - News
[Insert your own eye roll or Who's That Girl From Michigan With the clipped European accent punch line here.] A dancing dog steals the spotlight | As the cast and crew of The Artist took to the stage to celebrate their win for Best Motion Picture
Go with cotton or wool that will ventilate (and absorb) better, leaving you to sweat only small stuff. 2. Rotate your shoes every day and avoid boots. Those boots were made for rocking your nostrils and that's just what they'll do. 3.

The most significant change: making shoe parts — such as leather uppers and bootie inserts — at the same time, rather than one right after the other. The change, from sequence manufacturing to parallel, meant there wasn't as much waiting around.

At the weekend, he dressed in 'casual clothes', an only slightly less formal combo of slacks, sweater and polished shoes. Then he hit his 40s. And he suddenly turned up one day dressed in denim from top to toe. It was a hideous sight.
'If there is enough space at the back of the shoe to insert a finger, I can't solve the problem by asking for one size smaller,' she said. This should signal to a woman that she should look for another style. Opinions differ on the question of what