Where Can You Buy Toms?

Where Can You Buy TomsAmazon

Amazon.com Product Description
Awww, yeah. We thought we knew the meaning of comfort, but TOMS' Canvas slip-on schooled us. Its cool, casual upper has an elastic inset at the vamp and darts at the toe to add wearing ease to its padded footbed and cushioning rubber outsole. It'll be your new favorite.

No Mustache? No Problem. Slip On A Pair of Mustachioed TOMS. The shoes have gained popularity in the past few years and now it’s almost impossible to walk through the halls without seeing someone wearing them.

Here is the video on where you can buy TOMS shoes  |  "This Is Where To Get TOMS"




“We should all wear Toms because kids in Africa need shoes,” said freshman Kody Mitchell.

TOMS Shoes partnered with the Movember Foundation to issue limited edition men's and women's classics and botas for mustache season. "Spreading awareness of this cause is not only important, but classy..." says the TOMS website. The classic styles feature "an embroidered Mo, the luxurious symbol of Movember, over refined brushed twill." The men's botas boast a bolder Mo over two-toned brushed twill.

Toms come in a wide spectrum of colors and patterns. Toms also recently started making a vegan version of their show. While the original soles of the shoes are made of leather, the vegan option’s soles are made of canvas. There are also different styles of Toms, from wedges to boots and everything in between. The color and fabric options are vast as well, offering solids, patterns, glitters, and even hand painted artist styles.

What compels us to wear Toms is different for each person. Maybe you like them because they are cute or because they are for a good cause. But one thing is for sure, as long as they keep making people feel good, Toms aren’t going anywhere.


One for One Movement

In 2006, American traveler Blake Mycoskie befriended children in Argentina and found they had no shoes to protect their feet. Wanting to help, he created TOMS Shoes, a company that would match every pair of shoes purchased with a pair of new shoes given to a child in need. One for One. Blake returned to Argentina with a group of family, friends and staff later that year with 10,000 pairs of shoes made possible by TOMS customers.


Why Shoes?

Many children in developing countries grow up barefoot. Whether at play, doing chores or going to school, these children are at risk:

•A leading cause of disease in developing countries is soil-transmitted diseases, which can penetrate the skin through bare feet. Wearing shoes can help prevent these diseases, and the long-term physical and cognitive harm they cause.

•Wearing shoes also prevents feet from getting cuts and sores. Not only are these injuries painful, they also are dangerous when wounds become infected.

•Many times children can't attend school barefoot because shoes are a required part of their uniform. If they don't have shoes, they don't go to school. If they don't receive an education, they don't have the opportunity to realize their potential.