Superfeet Blue Insoles
June 27, 2008
All right, so I’ve been harsh on Superfeet before, but I must atone, at least when it comes to the original, classic Superfeet Blue.
I struggled with all the fancy ‘new’ versions of Superfeet, tried other insoles, and was generally unsatisfied and disgruntled with the whole thing, until I realized – my most comfortable pair of shoes were always those sporting my manky, 10 year-old (seriously! TEN years) Superfeet blue insoles. And let me tell you, after 10 years, it’s amazing anyone stayed friends with me with those insoles anywhere near. So I bravely purchased another pair, and they’re exactly the same. My old friends, Superfeet blue. I don’t know what’s different, but it works. And I am NOT throwing out those 10-year-old ones. They’re still good, they’re still good!
Superfeet Green Insoles
January 27, 2008
Superfeet. Super? Well….
For my daily caveat, allow me to state that I’ve used Superfeet insoles for years. YEARS. They are a staple of most of my boots. Usually, the first thing I do when I get new boots is to put Superfeet insoles into them to make them better.
However, I use Superfeet not because I think they’re the best, but because I think they’re better than what most boots come with. Yes, I’m settling. Then again, it’s not as if this is a lifetime commitment. I can quit this relationship anytime, so I continue to brazenly jump from footbed to footbed, always practicing safe – lacing? Er.
As footbeds go, they are fairly supportive, and take up a little volume in the footwear, which is nice when dealing with “unisex” or men’s boots that tend to be too roomy for women’s slender and delicate feet (ha! but seriously, they are too roomy). That said, Superfeet are made for people who overpronate. Look, the overpronating thing – maybe a bunch of you really do have this problem. Maybe all the buzz and hype and the fact that I can’t walk into a running shoe store and look at shoes without a sales-type pouncing on me and declaring with confident glee, “You an overpronator?” isn’t simply a result of the running shoe media equivalent to the Atkins diet. But look, manufacturers. NOT EVERYONE IS AN OVERPRONATOR. I, in fact, underpronate. I’ve got arches that hobbits can walk under, and I ask you, where are the footbeds for me? Superfeet’s product pamphlet states that their insoles are made primarily for those who overpronate. Sigh. That would be OK, if they had an option for those who don’t overpronate; those with normal feet or high arches or underpronating feet. But they don’t, so my poor overstressed arches have to make do with the same insoles that serve the billions and billions of overpronators out there, and how exactly does one insole solve two completely opposite problems?
I have read with significant skepticism all the stories on Superfeet’s web site from customers who allegedly couldn’t walk without falling to their knees in agony until angels from on high brought them Superfeet insoles, which have changed their lives and allowed them to immediately compete in ultramarathons without getting sore feet or blisters. I can’t imagine these insoles making that much of a difference. Those people must really have been in bad shape before trying Superfeet, and by that I mean they probably didn’t have any shoes at all. Yes, I have once again lapsed into my old standby of sarcastic hyperbole to get my point across. I don’t mean to be overly harsh or critical; Superfeet insoles don’t seem to cause me any problems that I wouldn’t have otherwise, and in most cases they seem to improve matters when compared to the manufacturer’s insoles that come with most boots. I even recommend them to my friends (especially those who OVERPRONATE). So, I continue to use the Superfeet, and continue to refer to them in my mind as “OKfeet” and “BetterThanNothingfeet.” To be truly Super, they’ll have to work a little harder.
Superfeet Berry Insoles for Women
January 27, 2008

This will be the shortest review ever. These insoles must have been created by someone who doesn’t think women should be allowed to walk, because after a few miles with these in my boots, I sure couldn’t. Oh, the pain. I swapped them back out and the pain was miraculously gone. Back to the drawing board, SuperFeet.



