Many years ago I had a pair of Chaco sandals that I never learned to love. I was recovering from foot surgery, when I realized that the straps were irritating my scars. So I passed them on to a friend. I didn’t think about them again for years!
When it was time to move into the van and hit the road three years ago, I came across a pair of Chacos in my size. I grabbed them, tossed them in the van and put them to hard use. This time I stuck with them until I learned to love them! I bought clothes to go with them. I wore them with dresses. I wore them kayaking. I wore them clean and I wore them dirty. I really did learn to love them fully. Well, almost fully. See I never really loved the straps! It wasn’t the way they felt, that was fine. They were not irritating my scars anymore! I simply did not LOVE the fact that the straps were a subtle striped pattern of oranges, browns and tans. I found that I spent way too much time trying to match that pattern to my clothes. Silly but true! I was obsessing about whether or not my Chacos matched every outfit. There was no room for this stress in my everyday van-life!
So I started to research the process of having the straps changed. I learned that the procedure is called ReChaco. http://www.chacos.com/US/en/sandal-repairs/ This is amazing. In our world of disposable clothing and cheap shoes, here is a company that will actually repair and rebuild the product for the customer!
I wore the sandals on one more trip, just to be sure that I wanted to ditch the orange stripes. But, when we returned from Australia, I was convinced- it was time for new straps. I had even spent time during our trip, worrying about my sandals matching my outfit!
I went to the Chaco page for ReChaco Repairs and clicked on “GET STARTED”. I entered the few necessary details about my sandals. It turned out that it would cost me $36.00 for new straps. That was not so bad. Cheaper than new sandals. And then the decision time happened! The screen filled with little rectangles of wonderful colors with fantastic names.
In looking at the selections, I ruled out the patterns first. Then narrowed it down to the colors “Grape wine”, “Chocolate brown” or “Treetop”. I really liked the idea of green, so I searched for images of the color “Treetop” and came up with only two-colored shoe example. When I compared that image to the color clip on the ReChaco page, I decided that the “Treetop” was the darker of the two greens in this photo example.
So, after looking at my closet I settled on the “Treetop” green straps. A solid color would be easier for me to enjoy wearing! And I own quite a bit of forest green and military green clothing. Treetop it is!
I finished the simple online process, printed the necessary pages and sent in the shoes. Then I waited.
The box arrived fairly FAST!
I started wearing them right away. I have worn them many, many times. I have tried to get them dirty to reduce the brightness of the green. But each time they get wet they return to almost the original bright green color. I am hopeful that with time they will get closer to the military green that I was originally expecting. But I don’t think they will ever turn the color of the wider straps in the back …….the color I was hoping to receive. And I did not anticipate them being thee different shades of green!
In todays world of disposable everything, planned obsolescence and throw-away products, it is refreshing to see a company that is willing to replace parts, rebuild sandals and keep you in your favorite footwear. Now if I could just be more forgiving of my color matching and wardrobe options!
My summary of this experience:
The process of ReChaco is simple– just click a few buttons, make a selection and send in your sandals.
The price of ReChaco is reasonable– less than a new pair for a full redo, and they also do sole replacement, strap and buckle repair and more.
The turn-around time for ReChaco is terrific– because no one wants to be without their sandals for too long.
Choose your colors carefully- or maybe it just shouldn’t matter what color your Chacos are!