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Bloch (company)

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Bloch
IndustryManufacturing
Founded1931
FounderJacob Bloch
Headquarters,
ProductsDance supplies
Websitewww.bloch.com.au

Bloch is a manufacturer of pointe shoes and other types of dance shoes, dance costumes, and dance fashion accessories.

History

The Bloch company was founded by Jacob Bloch, a cobbler who emigrated from Eastern Europe to Australia in 1931.[1] Bloch began making pointe shoes in a workshop in Paddington, Sydney in 1932, when he noticed a ballet dancer struggling to stay en pointe and offered to make her an improved pair of shoes. Later, he made custom ballet shoes for Tamara Toumanova, David Lichine, Helene Kirsova, and other visiting Russian ballet dancers. With the expanding popularity of his product, Bloch began selling his pointe shoes throughout Australia.

The company has since expanded its product line with the addition of dance and street apparel and accessories.[1] Today, Bloch's corporate headquarters are located in Sydney, Australia, with a European head office in London. It operates one flagship store and 14 other stores across Australia, one store in London and one in Paris; all other sales are conducted through independent retailers.

Products

Bloch manufactures various types of shoes including pointe shoes, ballet flats, jazz shoes, character and tap shoes, ballroom shoes, and dance sneakers, as well as a wide range of dance apparel.

Pointe shoe manufacturing

Bloch employs a pointe shoe manufacturing method known as turnshoe. Bloch pointe shoes use three different recipes of paste in the toe box.[2][failed verification] The standard paste, "paste A", is a firm, hard paste, that was formulated to withstand varying heat and humidity. "Paste B" is more malleable and thus allows the shoe to more quickly mold to the shape of the foot; because of its high malleability, this paste breaks down (i.e., shoe structural support degrades) faster than paste A. A third recipe, known as "TMT™" or "Thermo-Morph Technology" paste, is a heat activated material that allows the shoe to be molded to the foot when subjected to directed hot air from a hair dryer.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b "About Us". Bloch. Retrieved 2013-03-21. Bloch's love for dance and music inspired him to travel to local ballet studios and watch the dancers.
  2. ^ "2008 Pointe Shoe Guide". Pointe Magazine. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  3. ^ "How to modify TMT Pointe Shoes". Dancewear 365. Retrieved 2013-03-22.