BOOTS, Texas

H1989.964

Tan coloured, slip on, ankle length boots. Synthetic sole and heel with leather upper and lining. Synthetic and foam insole. Plain style with stitching on vamp, narrow rounded toe and cuban heel. Small leather tag attached to vamp on each boot with an oval gold and white metal button. The following imprint appears on the soles of the boots; " TEXASBOOT / 25 ". There are also a couple of white and red stickers with " M-N01 " written on them. A crown symbol followed by " MADE BY DAIKOBE / KINGS / ROAD " is stitched in yellow thread on black cloth and is attached to the in- soles of each boot. Also on the inside of each boot there is a sticker with some Japanese writing and the following " No 7 / LBR / 1/7/- ". The boots, with various other articles, were presented to the Western Australian Government following the Sister State agreement in 1981. They came from the Hyogo Exhibition in Japan. They were displayed in the Beaufort Street Gallery for a number of years. See File.

Department: 

History Department

Collection

History Collection

Collection Item Data

Accession Number: H1989.964
Accession Date: 6 Oct 1989

Material

Foam/Synthetic/Polymer

Leather, vinyl, thread, metal, foam, cloth.

Thread/Textile
Metal
Cloth/Textile
Vinyl/Synthetic/Polymer
Leather
Metal/Metal
Leather/Leather

Measurement

length255mm
width100mm
height140mm

 


 

The WA Museum is in the process of digitising its collections. This record may not have been reviewed by curatorial staff and may be inaccurate or incomplete. Research departments are continually working on these collections by adding new objects and reviewing existing content when new information is made available.

Enquiries can be emailed to reception@museum.wa.gov.au

 

 

Share
Facebook Twitter

Cite this page
Western Australian Museum Collections https://museum.wa.gov.au/online-collections/content/H1989.964
Accessed 24 Jun 2025

Rights
We support the open release of data and information about our collections.

Text content on this page is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Image content on this page is copyright WA Museum.