I love European shoes. But as much as I try and keep up with what euro size my kids are wearing, I inevitably find myself trying to remember how it all matches up. And my spacial reasoning ain’t good enough to take a look at the shoe and say “Hey! That’s my kid’s size.” And since my kid’s feet grow like weeds, there is a good chance I haven’t even Looked at whether their shoes fit since an entire size ago.
Can YOU keep track of these things?
So today, I put on my list for the evening “sort out shoes”. With garage sale season in full swing and Half-Pint not that far away – not to mention a kid in school (eek!) for the first time and a now-two-year-old whose feet are not growing in sync with his older brother – well, it needed to be done.
So here I am right now, with piles (and bags) of shoes on my table – I’d show you, but it’s too embarrassing. Some in Euro sizes, some in US sizes, and some in sizes that don’t make sense at all. New-to-me shoes in bags and boxes and current shoes laying out in their dirty stinky glory for comparison. But even after all of that comparing, I needed more info. So I went off to the good ole’ internets to find me a chart, and voila, wikipedia gave me the GOODS.
So awesome that I HAD to share it with you. Just click here and you’ll see more than you Ever (i promise) wanted to know about sizing feet and shoes. But keep scrolling down, and holy cats, you’ll hit the motherload of charts. I’m printing one and putting in my purse T-O-D-A-Y. Never again will I run across the Japanese shoes and think “these numbers look vaguely similar to Euro sizing, but it absolutely isn’t the same.” Oh, this HAS happened to me (at Half-Pint, actually!).
Of course, the never fail way to do it is to just trace your kids foot on a piece of paper, which we talk about in our Bargain Cheet Sheets. That’s our recommended fail-safe way, because you know how these shoe companies work. They even change their OWN SIZING mid stream! As if we didn’t already have enough information about our children’s growing patterns in our brain.
But alas, remember my kid’s have weeds for feet. So, if you’re like me, Happy graph oogling-
Ellen