Vibram has detailed instructions on their site on how to measure your feet and order the correct size. My feet are just between two sizes, so I ordered the larger size, just like the website instructed.
When I got my Vibram's (these are a pair of Sprints) it was clear that they were way too large. I had over 1 cm of spare room at the heel when I slid my toes forward. Thanks to the return policy of www.zehenschuhe.de I exchanged them for a smalller size. I was quite disappointed to find out that one size down was now too small. My second toe couldn't fully extend and when stretching my toes they were clearly limited in their movement by the toe pockets.
If you want to find the right size for your Vibram Fivefingers, you have to put your feet flat on the ground. Then you grab the part of the rubber that extends slightly to the front of your toes. When you move the end of the rubber a bit back and forth, you will feel it touching and releasing the tip of your toe. When you leave the rubber alone, it should be right in front of the tip of your toe, with about 1mm play.
Luckily, it is quite easy to achieve a perfect fit by extending the toes that are not long enough. To do this, you have to stretch the rubber real hard. I used a socket wrench which I crammed into the shoe with some more objects behind it to achieve a maximal stretch. Don't be afraid to overdo it, since after the operation the rubber will come back to almost it's original size. Depending on the amount of tension on the rubber I have been able to gain a maximum of about 5mm in length gain. Other attempts only yielded about 2mm of stretch.
Whilst the shoe is stretched you have to heat the rubber with a lighter:
- hold the flame against the rubber, not just under the rubber (the tip of the flame would be way to hot)
- move the flame over all of the rubber that is elegible for stretching, starting from the forefoot area until the top of the toe
- keep doing this for 5 minutes (I know: this is long). The rubber will smell and fumes will come off. Don't worry: this is the internal links in the rubber that are breaking and will result in some amount of stretch (you can't actually melt vulcanised rubber, it's more breaking down links inside it)
- when you're done heating, put the heated area in cold water for 30 seconds. Leave the shoe under tension for another 5 minutes and then move on to the second shoe
You can do this for all toes that need extension. I started by extending the second toe by about 5mm. I walked around on the shoes for a day like that, still feeling a bit cramped on the big toes. The next day I extended those with about 3mm. When walking around like that they almost felt perfect, but the little toe was just being rubbed a bit by the shoe whilst walking. So I stretched those by a very small amount, around 1mm.
My Vibram Fivefingers are now perfect and I can't wait to really run longer distances in them!
^ Spam!
ReplyDeleteIn any case, I just got an exchange and these ones feel slightly small too... I'm too nervous about wrecking them to heat them up.
I've just tried a size up from the 39's and its huge! I'm defiantly going to try this out on the big toe pockets.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the post
This post just saved me $80. I've been wearing a pair of Vibrams that is just the tiniest, most excruciatingly annoying bit too small on my left big toe, but perfect everywhere else. And now, instead of buying a pair that are too big everywhere except my left big toe, I can actually FIX the pair I own!
ReplyDeleteWill this affect the tread pattern on the sole of the shoe? Considering trying this with a pair of Komodo Sports I just bought but don't want to ruin them.
ReplyDeleteIt didn't on my bikilas (see comment below)
DeleteThank you for the post! Just tried it with the big toe of my Bormio - twice. Unfortunately with no great effect - perhaps it got 1 mm more length. I think the thicker sole is not very suitable for the stretching. At one place the two layers of rubber soles loosed and have to get glued together again.
ReplyDeleteI am now considering of buying one size up. :-(
Claudia
I just tested this on my Bikilas LS with a 1800w hairdryer instead, and works a treat. it takes about 2-3 minutes per toe.
ReplyDeleteCheers!
Wow, this is great! You just saved me a ton of trouble.
ReplyDeleteFor those of you using a hairdryer: patience, patience, patience. I spent about 5 minutes heating up each toe and ended up doing it a second time over to really get the stretch I needed (3 mm).
Dipping the toes in near boiling water works great too.
ReplyDeletei just got a pair thats too narrow, any advice for that?
ReplyDeleteWhy about leather? I have a pair if Carezza boots and although most 38 fit perfectly, the Carezzas which are all Kangaroo leather are a bit snug. Any ideas how to make then a little rookie without tearing the leather would help! Th
ReplyDeleteSorry I meant "roomie" not rookie.
ReplyDeleteThanks
Thanks for the info. Trying to get the little toes to stretch out a bit. Did the open flame, now leaving them to stretch overnight.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! Tried it and it worked!!!
ReplyDeleteAfter receiving my vibrant fivefingers I was excited to find how well they fit, but after wearing them for a day I found the pinky toe pockets to be to small. Reading several reviews on the Alita Loop fivefingers regarding the pocket for the pinky toe. Many customers said the pinky toes were just to small. I knew if I bought a size up the other toes would not fit as good as they do in my 38's, so I tried your method with the end of a rounded fork ( covering the fork end with a thick cloth). It worked! Now they fit much better! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteBig Thanks, KD! I have Two Pairs of VFF's (a model KSO, and a model KMD Sport LS) both sized 41. I found that I was getting big toe joint aches from both pairs despite ensuring trimmed toe nails (all other toes were fine). I thought I sized them correctly and wore both for a while with OK results. I believe my feet are getting slightly bigger with age. Anyway your internal bracing method and it worked great - now they fit right! Instead of the open flame method (scare of melting or burning them), I simply used my 1875W hair dryer in a fan ventilated bathroom, thoroughly heated Only the rubber underneath the heel-to-toe brace until it smelled (CAREFULLY avoided the cloth uppers). I then allowed the shoes to cool down naturally while still internally braced. Total stretching job for two pairs of shoes took ~ 1/2 hour or less. Immediately test fitted and ran around the house - Problem Solved! Yay!
ReplyDeleteWhat about leaving with a socket or modified shoe tree for like a day or a week. Also maybe getting there shoe really wet(cold water) then leaving streched to air dry. Really want to avoid heating since my one shoes came unglued. I tried re-gluing them with shoe glue unsuccessfully. Going to try with E6000. Will post results.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
ReplyDelete