Why Pre-Owned Boots Are Better for the Planet
Every pair of football boots has a carbon footprint. From the energy used in manufacturing to the resources required for raw materials, new boots take a toll on the environment. Choosing pre-owned is one of the most impactful steps you can take as a conscious consumer.
The True Cost of New Boots
It takes approximately 2,700 liters of water to produce a single pair of leather football boots — that's enough drinking water for one person for nearly three years. The tanning process for leather involves chemicals that can pollute local water sources if not properly managed. Synthetic boots aren't much better — they're made from petroleum-based plastics that will take hundreds of years to decompose.
The Vintage Solution
When you buy pre-owned vintage boots, you're extending the useful life of a product that has already been manufactured. No additional water, energy, or raw materials are consumed. You're also keeping boots out of landfills, where they would take decades or centuries to break down. One pair of pre-owned boots saves approximately 10 kg of CO2 emissions compared to buying new.
Quality That Lasts
Vintage boots were built to last. The leather used in older boots was often thicker and more durable than modern materials. A well-maintained pair of 90s-era Copas can easily outlast three pairs of modern entry-level synthetic boots. Buy once (or once more), buy vintage.