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Shoelace

Shoelace is a length of cord or braided material used to secure footwear by threading through eyelets or lace loops and tying a knot. Laces come in flat and round profiles and are manufactured from materials such as cotton, polyester, nylon, or leather. Cotton and polyester laces are common for everyday shoes, while nylon blends offer higher strength and resistance to wear. Laces vary in diameter from about 2 to 8 millimeters and in length from roughly 9 inches for children’s shoes to more than 60 inches for some boots, with the exact length chosen to match the number and spacing of eyelets and the preferred tying style.

Eyelets and aglets: The ends of laces are protected by tips called aglets, which aid threading and

History: Lacing systems date back centuries, but machine-made shoelaces became common in the late 19th and early

Tying and maintenance: The most common method is the standard shoelace knot or bow, though many alternative

reduce
fraying.
Laces
may
pass
through
eyelets,
hooks,
or
grommets
in
the
shoe’s
upper.
20th
centuries
with
the
rise
of
mass-produced
footwear
and
athletic
shoes.
The
aglet’s
development
helped
standardize
lacing.
patterns
exist,
including
loop-and-swoop
methods
and
locking
laces.
Laces
should
be
kept
clean
and
replaced
when
frayed.
Some
footwear
uses
elastic
or
no-tie
laces
for
convenience.