If you’re doing all that stuff already and your feet don’t seem to be particularly sweaty (when you take off your shoes, are your socks always damp?) then I’ll go along with others and guess that something funky started growing in that particular pair of shoes. If you wear other shoes does the odor go away?
If so, get some sneaker spray (I picked up a can of generic antifungal foot/sneaker spray for about $6 at the drugstore), give your leather shoes a good spritz and let them sit there to dry for a few days. If the insole/sock liner is old or funky, ditch it and get a replacement (doesn’t have to be anything fancy, replacement liners are just a few bucks).
While rubbing alcohol from a sprayer may do the trick I’d be worried about drying out the leather and potentially messing up the polish on a pair of nice shoes, I think the shoe spray is worth it.
It can’t hurt to try an athlete’s foot treatment, just in case! I had it once, the only symptom was a little bit of peeling skin between my big toe and it’s neighbor. But - stinky feet!
I really liked Lamisil. It’s got the shortest treatment time, and took care of the problem in no time. I dealt with the stinky feet for quite a while before figuring the Lamisil treatment couldn’t hurt, so why not - and then problem solved. It’s really nice not to worry about stinky feet. Now I just make sure to wear fresh socks every day and use 2 pair of shoes, each every other day to give ample dry-out time. And I really hadn’t thought I had athlete’s foot, but apparently I did. I blame a guy I dated for a short time who used my shower.
I found out one summer that wearing my sneakers a lot without socks caused the shoes to absorb and radiate the funk (with wearing socks, they protect the shoes and get changed regularly so no problem). I was working night shift and kept smelling someone’s stinky feet and was tempted to say something about it…imagine my surprise when I realized it was me !
My feet used to stink a lot, but they haven’t since I found a surefire method I’ll tell you my secret…I never wear shoes!
But, seriously, you need to disinfect and deodorize your shoe. You’ve got to get the shoe clean. And it’s definitely the shoe if it happened in a plastic bag.
You need antifungal spray, antimicrobial spray (even lysol will do). Febreeze can add extra deodorize, but you can try the ones designed for foot stuff as well. Air them out after each product, before using the next. I’ve also heard of freezing them.
If you are not too attached to the shoes, try washing them in a washing machine. If there isn’t any exposed stitching, chances are they’ll make it through.
Only after doing all of this is dealing with your feet going to do any good, using the advice already offered. And definitely wear more than one shoe.
I would actually pour a splash of the strongest-content rubbing-alcohol in them and leave it overnight, or conversely, use hand sanitizer in them every time you take off the shoes, glopping the entire sole surface.
If that doesn’t work, get the Dr Scholl’s odor eaters but with this caveat: put a thin layer of baking soda down in the shoe first, then the odor-eater on top.
And you can still pour the liquid rubbing alcohol on this whole shebang every night-in fact I recommend that.
You might also try taking your shoes/socks off during the day and putting hand sanitizer on your bare feet-preferably alone.
Is the problem excessively sweaty feet? A very effective and powerful antiperspirant for use on hands, feet and underarms is Drysol. Many years of highly embarrassing underarm perspiration stopped overnight for me. They have it behind the counter at the pharmacy.
Same here. Shower or wash and dry your feet and then spray the underside of your toes and between them with a deorderant/anti-perspirant, then a shot to the soles just in case. I’d suggest you try Arrid Extra Dry - it has the highest percentage of Aluminum Chlorohydrate (of the brands at the store I go to anyway), which is the active ingredient in most of the deodorants I’m aware of.
Actually there are chlorophyll tablets that are supposed to help with any body odor. My dog had really smelly feet and we give him a chlorophyll chewy every night and his feet hardly smell at all now. Not too much sun or you might turn into The Human Tree.
Just a WAG - but tea will dry out your skin. If you have an open sore (like a blister,) wrapping a tea soaked bandage around it will cause a scab to form overnight.
I had a huge problem with foot odor up until my early 20s. Bad, like really bad. I don’t think too highly of the Dr. Scholl’s insoles. Odor Eaters are much more effective, in my experience. The best tip I ever got though, was Absorbine Jr. Original Liniment. It worked way better than any foot spray or powder for me. You’ll find it in the drug store, next to the Ben Gay, as it’s a pain relief liniment. It’s not as pungent as Ben Gay or similar topical creams, so you won’t smell like a locker room or a nursing home.
I have no idea why it works, but my uncle swore by it and it was very effective for me. It’ll probably cost you about $5-8 to find out if it works for you, and I would recommend giving it a fair shake with a fresh pair of shoes. Once a pair of shoes get funky, it’s practically impossible to reverse. Apply it every morning before you put your shoes on, and team it up with some Odor Eaters.
Better is Smartwool, but they are both good ideas. More health food stores (online also) carry Chloro tabs, even Amazon, iirc. Works for BO, Bad breath and farts, too.
Next- never wear any pair of shoes more than one day at a time. Cedar shoe trees work great.
Wintergreen rubbing alcohol works great on the feet, cools and kills the fungus and germs. Anti-fungal powder works better than Gold Bond.
Dr. Scholl’s is a good start. Buying a new pair of shoes even better. But if it is you that is smelling, try eating potato peels. It’s loaded with potassium - natural smell-killer. You can cook them like french fries.