Angelus Clear Shoe Cement
Angelus Clear Shoe Cement is a strong, flexible adhesive made for shoe repair, footwear prototyping, and leather work. It bonds rubber, leather, plastic, vinyl, fabric, and other common workshop materials, making it a go-to cement for reattaching soles, building samples, repairing sneakers, and assembling leather projects.
For footwear prototyping and shoe repair, this clear formula is especially useful when you need a durable bond without a dark adhesive line. Use it for sole repairs, upper components, reinforcement pieces, straps, patches, linings, rubber parts, and sample-room assembly.
Use It For
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Footwear prototypes
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Sneaker and boot repairs
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Re-gluing soles
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Leather and rubber bonding
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Plastic, vinyl, and fabric bonding
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Shoe upper sample work
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Straps, patches, tabs, and panels
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Sample-room assembly and repair kits
Why It Belongs on Your Bench
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Clear formula works cleanly across different materials
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Strong bond for shoe repair and prototype assembly
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Great for rubber, leather, plastic, vinyl, and fabric
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Useful for reattaching soles and repairing worn footwear
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Strong shop supply for makers, shoemakers, and repair work
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Available in both compact repair size and larger workshop size
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Trusted style of adhesive for serious footwear and leather projects
Product Details
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Brand: Angelus
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Product Type: Clear shoe cement
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Color: Clear
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Use: Shoe repair, sole bonding, prototype assembly, and leatherwork
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Best For: Footwear prototypes, sneakers, boots, soles, leather goods, rubber, vinyl, plastic, fabric, and repairs
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Category: Workshop Essentials / Adhesives
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Skill Level: Beginner to Professional
Available Variants
4 fl oz
Best for small repairs, test builds, compact benches, sneaker repair kits, and one-off footwear projects.
30.5 fl oz
Best for active workshops, repeated prototype builds, leather goods production, sole repairs, and makers who use shoe cement regularly.
Shop Note
For best results, clean both surfaces before applying. Apply cement to both sides, allow it to sit until tacky, then press the parts together firmly. Clamp when possible and allow a full cure before wearing or stressing the repair. Always test on scrap material first, especially with finished leather, coated materials, or delicate sample parts.