My name is Jennifer June, and this is my web page.
Back some time ago, I decided I wanted to become a bootmaker, specifically a cowboy bootmaker. This had something to do with to my getting hold of a copy of Tyler Beard’s & Jim Arndt’s The Cowboy Boot Book, and, about the same time, finding a pair of peewees (circa 1950) that fit me, attitude n’ all: little black Corrals with a wide box toe. Anyway, these two things changed my life.
When I think about boots, all sorts of thing come to mind: I think of art, romance, history and adventure…I like custom-made cowboy boots because they represent to me the best of both individualism and collaboration. Customers bring a purpose and a personality…bootmakers provide a range of materials, traditions, expertise and innovation. To me, custom cowboy boots are a sort of portraiture, full of imagination, meaning and metaphor.
I first posted this web page back in February 1997. Back then there wasn’t much on the internet about cowboy boots or bootmaking. So I designed my Tribute to Cowboy Boots website, to do the following:
- provide information about the American craft of custom cowboy bootmaking,
- make it fun and easy to find boot-related links on the world-wide-web, and…
- get people as excited about cowboy boots as I was when I pulled on that pair of Corrals.
My Tribute to Cowboy Boots started off small and kinda hokey. I wrote some words, I took some pictures, and I turned them into html…that’s how it started.
Then in October of 1998, something amazing happened. I was driving through the New Mexican desert, I stopped to take a picture in Alamogordo, the place where Highway 54 and 70 crossed one another. Afterwards, I stepped into the Boot Hill Café, ordered “the special”, chatted some with the waitress and the owner, and talked about my trip a bit. As I was leaving, the owner showed me that their menu had a picture of a boot on it.
To my surprise, the menu didn’t have just any boot on it. It had MY boot on it! The one at the top of my web page…the same image I scanned myself from a 1950′s cardboard cut-out…the same boot that was on my business card I’d just handed to the owner! The owner told me her nephew had gotten the picture “off the computer”. Let me tell you, it is a very peculiar thing to have one of your ideas handed back to you by a stranger in the middle of a wide nearly-empty New Mexico desert. She gave me a menu to take with me as a souvenir, saying “They’re up all over town.”
…And at this moment my life was changed once again – this time because I came to realize the power of the web. The web can make the world seem big and small at the same time.
Nowadays, I get more email than I can answer, but I am very grateful to those people write to thank me for my work, or who encourage me to keep following my dream of bootmaking. As my web development skills have improved I’ve tried to add features, such as Book of Bootnik Poetry.
All along, my web page has given me a place for introspection and self-expression. Through it I learn all sorts of things…and I meet all sorts of people…online, and sometimes even in-person. And in part, this website is a chronicle of my own journey towards becoming a bootmaker. As you can tell from reading my web log, I’m making some headway towards fulfilling my dream.
It’ll take lots more hard work, lots more learning. But maybe the most important thing I’ve learned so far is that the first and most crucial step towards fulfilling your dream is to have one in the first place.



Jennifer June,
You are sweet! Much continued success to you and those marvelous boots you make. I have seen and worn many in my life.
Sincerely,
Sunny Murchison
South Pasadena, California
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Jenn…
I’ve been thinking about you and feeling really grateful. You were the only seemingly reliable source I could find on the web back in 2005 when I was doing research and looking for bootmaker. How wonderful that you were a woman too – in what was a pretty masculine landscape (back then anyway). And, you’re still a trusted go-to expert and influencer. Hope to catch up soon, but I’m following you all over the place now (Facebook, Twitter, etc.) Rock on sister… and thank you!
WHEN I WAS A LITTLE GIRL, DAD, FROM OKLAHOMA, ALWAYS HAD A PAIR OF COWBOY BOOTS IN HIS CLOSET. I WOULD GAZE AT THEM, HERE, IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
IT’S A LONG TIME SINCE THOSE EARLY COWBOY BOOTS IN DAD’S CLOSET, BUT I HAVE MY OWN GORGEOUS COWBOY BOOTS.
GOD BLESS YOU AND GOD BLESS COWBOY BOOTS AND THE PEOPLE WHO WEAR THEM.
SUNNY MURCHISON AND LIL MONTY LEE
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA
I REMEMBER MY LATE BROTHER D. LEE PAGE’S BLUE SNAKE LIZARD COWBOY BOOTS. I LOVED THEM. BLUE IS THE PAGE FAMILY COLOR. MY MOTHER STORED THOSE BOOTS AFTER LEE’S DEATH, BUT, TO THIS DAY, I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THEM. D.LEE PAGE AND HIS BLUE LIZARD BOOTS ARE IN MY LOVING MEMORIES OF MY LATE BROTHER.
GOD BLESS YOU ALL.
SUNNY MURCHISON AND LIL MONTY LEE
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA