The case for using a cobbler is simple. £80 of resoling work on a £300 pair of Loake brogues gives you another five years of wear. £25 of restitching saves a £150 pair of Doc Martens from the bin. £40 of recolouring transforms a tired pair of leather boots. Manchester has a stronger cobbler scene than most cities and most of it is concentrated in a handful of specialists who actually know their craft.
The Serious Specialists
Manchester Cobblers and Co. – 12 Tib Street, NQ
The city centre serious option. Goodyear-welted resoling on premium leather shoes (Loake, Crockett and Jones, Church’s, Cheaney) from £80. Re-stitching, re-conditioning, recolouring. Will work on vintage leather boots and bags as well as shoes. Three to four weeks turnaround for serious work.
Best for: Premium leather, full resoling, restoration
Timpson – multiple Manchester locations
The mainstream chain but the work is genuinely good for everyday repairs. Resoling from £35, heel replacement from £15, stitching from £20. Same-day on simple jobs. Useful for casual leather and budget repairs but not for serious vintage or premium work.
Hyman’s Shoe Repairs – 47 Stockport Road, Levenshulme
Family-run since the 70s. The cobbler the local cobblers send their own shoes to. Specialises in vintage leather, designer shoes, theatrical work. Booking ahead recommended, treats every pair like it matters.
Pendleton Leather Repairs – Salford
Half cobbler, half leather specialist. Will work on shoes, jackets, bags, belts. Strong on dye work and recolouring. Used to handling expensive pieces.
Sneaker Restoration
Sneaker Spa Manchester – Tib Street
Sneaker-specific cleaning and restoration. Deep cleaning from £25, midsole repair from £35, full restoration from £80+. Will work on Air Jordans, Yeezys, Common Projects, Margiela. Drop-off and pickup, 5-10 day turnaround.
Crep Protect (cleaning kits, mainstream)
Not a service but worth mentioning – the Crep Protect kits are sold at Size?, JD and END. £15-25 for a cleaning kit that handles light maintenance at home. Use them between professional cleans.
Manchester Sneaker Cleaning – online with city centre dropoff
Several smaller operators offer sneaker cleaning via Instagram and Depop. Search Manchester sneaker cleaning for current options. £15-50 per pair depending on condition.
Doc Martens Specifically
Manchester Cobblers and Co. (covered above)
Will resole DMs properly with the original-style sole. From £55 for a full resole.
Dr Martens own resoling service
Dr Martens itself runs a UK resoling service via post. Send your boots to their UK facility, they resole and return. From £65 for a full resole. The DM stores on Market Street can advise on the process.
Hyman’s (covered above)
The proper DM resole option for vintage DMs and the more unusual sole types.
By Shoe Type
Goodyear welted leather (Loake, Crockett, Church’s, Cheaney)
Take to Manchester Cobblers and Co. or Hyman’s. Avoid Timpson for these – the welt is too valuable to risk on chain repair. £70-150 for full resole.
Cemented leather (most mid-market shoes)
Timpson handles these well. £30-60 for resole.
Italian designer (Common Projects, Maison Margiela, Visvim)
Manchester Cobblers and Co. or specialist sneaker restoration. £50-150 depending on work.
Doc Martens
Manchester Cobblers, Dr Martens own service, or Hyman’s.
Trainers and sneakers
Sneaker Spa or Manchester Sneaker Cleaning. Standard cobblers struggle with modern foam and rubber midsoles.
Heeled boots and women’s shoes
Timpson for everyday. Manchester Cobblers and Co. for serious leather. Heel tip replacement from £8.
Vintage leather (any era)
Hyman’s. Specialist in old leather, knows what survives and what doesn’t.
Common Repairs and What They Cost
- Heel tip replacement: £6-12
- Heel block rebuild: £20-40
- Half sole (front): £25-50
- Full sole: £40-150 depending on welt type
- Stitching repair: £15-30
- Zip replacement (boots): £30-60
- Recolouring (full shoe): £30-60
- Conditioning and polish: £8-15
- Sneaker deep clean: £15-30
- Sneaker midsole repair: £30-50
- Sneaker full restoration: £80-200
How to Use a Cobbler Properly
Catch issues early
A worn-down heel is a £10 fix. A heel that’s worn through to the leather is a £40 fix. Check your shoes monthly and act early.
Don’t wear shoes through
Once leather wears through to the welt or the upper, full resoling becomes harder. Most premium shoes have a clear point at which the sole has worn enough to need replacing – usually visible as the welt becomes exposed.
Conditioning matters
£8 worth of leather conditioning every six months extends shoe life by years. Most premium cobblers offer it as a quick add-on service.
Save the original heels
If you’re getting heels replaced on premium shoes, ask the cobbler to use the original heel block where possible. Cheaper replacements often don’t match the original construction.
Bring proof of purchase for warranties
Some premium brands (Crockett, Loake, Church’s) include resoling warranties or discounted services. Bring receipts or original boxes if you have them.
Lead time
Walk-in fixes (heel tips, polishing): same day. Standard resoling: 1-2 weeks. Goodyear welt full resole: 2-4 weeks. Sneaker restoration: 1-2 weeks. Specialist vintage: 4-8 weeks.
The Repair vs Replace Calculus
Worth repairing: anything Goodyear welted (Loake, Church’s, Crockett, Cheaney, Allen Edmonds), Doc Martens, Common Projects, Dr Martens, premium boots over £150 original price, vintage leather of any kind.
Worth replacing instead: most fast fashion footwear under £80, badly damaged sneakers where restoration cost approaches replacement cost, anything with synthetic uppers that have worn through.
Protecting Shoes Before They Need Repair
Cedar shoe trees
£15-30 a pair, doubles the lifespan of leather shoes. Available at Loake, Crockett and Jones, John Lewis.
Saphir leather conditioner
The premium leather conditioner. £15 a tin, lasts years. Apply every 3-6 months to leather shoes.
Crep Protect spray
Sneaker waterproofing. £12 a can. Apply when new, reapply monthly.
Storage
Original boxes or shoe bags. Keep leather away from heat sources. Rotate pairs – don’t wear the same shoes two days running, especially leather.