The Forgotten Throne of Every 70s Shoe Store
If you grew up in the 70s, 80s, or even the early 90s, you probably remember this strange little metal “seat” the salesperson used to sit on — the low, shiny, foot-measuring throne that looked more like gym equipment than furniture.
Back then, buying shoes wasn’t just a quick grab-and-go like it is today. It was an event. Your mom dressed you up, the store smelled like new leather, rubber soles, and that strange powder they sprinkled inside shoes, and then… there it was.
The Shoe Salesperson’s Saddle.
This contraption was the unofficial symbol of childhood shoe shopping.
Tall enough to seem important, small enough to seem mysterious, and equipped with a footrest that looked like a slide, it was the center of every visit.
The Ritual Everyone Remembers
The moment you approached, the salesperson — usually in a tie, vest, or an apron full of pens — would sit down on this device like a royal servant preparing for duty.
You would place your foot on the angled platform, and without fail, they would pull out the Brannock device — that cold metal foot-measuring tool that always felt like a medieval instrument.
Every kid felt the same three things:
- Confusion – “Why does he need to touch my heel?”
- Awkwardness – “Do I stand? Do I sit? Am I doing this right?”
- Pride – “Yes. That’s right. I grew half a size.”
Then came the test walk.
The little stomp.
The question every parent asked:
“Do they feel okay? Wiggle your toes.”
A Seat That Wasn’t Really for Sitting
To this day, nobody knows who designed this thing — but one thing is clear:
No child ever sat on it.
This was sacred territory.
Reserved for the Shoe Store Wizard only.
It was the barber chair of shoe shopping.
The dentist chair of childhood fashion.
The throne of soles and souls.
Why It Disappeared
Shoe stores changed.
Self-service replaced the personal ritual.
The salesperson disappeared, the magic vanished, and this funny little stool went with it.
Now we measure our own feet, guess our size, and hope for the best.
But for anyone who grew up before the touchscreen era, this chair is a whole memory by itself. A reminder of:
- Going shoe shopping before the first day of school
- Your mom insisting you needed “one pair for everyday and one nice pair”
- Walking out with squeaky-clean sneakers you refused to wrinkle
- Feeling like you had grown up a little every time the salesperson said, “You’re a size bigger than last year!”
A Childhood Time Machine
Looking at this picture isn’t just nostalgia — it’s time travel.
It’s one of those small objects that instantly brings you back to a world that no longer exists. A world where:
- Someone tied your laces for you
- Shoes came in boxes stuffed with soft white tissue
- And buying new sneakers felt like the greatest day of your life
The stool may be gone, but the memories?
They’re still perfectly measured.


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