Hart88,
Actually, did some experimenting over the weekend and found something that worked out even better and won't need the strap.
I have this wooden insert I made a while ago (bought an oval disk from the hobby store a while ago, it's about an inch thick. Cut it in half and then carved/filed it until it fit in the shoes and had a nice angle on it). I've never been able to find a shoe/fit to make it work completely, so pushed it off for over the counter inserts stacked up.
Anyway, got the idea to try again with that one. I put it in the shoe (secured by duct tape so I can easily remove it if I wanted). Then I put a Dr Scholls tri-comfort (it has a plastic support in it) followed by a Profoot Miracle (custom molding insoles). Both are available at any drug store.
They felt great, but the inserts kept moving and when I took my foot out, they back kept coming up.
This weekend, was playing with Christmas lights again and needed to use the stapler. I got this idea. I first stapled the tri-comfort to the wooden insert, and then used two staples on the ProFoot insert. The only thing I had to do after that is use some tape over the staples and they stay great and fit wonderful.
I did a measure to see how much I increased the height. The non-modified shoe has a 3" heel with a 1" platform, so the effective heel is only 2" (no wonder they feel like flats!). With the inserts, my heel is now 4.5" (an increase by 1.5"!) with a 1" platform, giving me a 3.5" effective heel (much nicer). Also, I measured a .75" lip so that combined with the stretchy shoe makes them fit and feel perfect:)
Not sure I would try this on every shoe, but for this (Steve Madden Snatch) it works and feels great!:)
Scotty
Dr Scholls Triad
http://www.drscholls.com/images/prod...rt_Insoles.gif
ProFoot Miracle
http://akimages.crossmediaservices.c...r2_hhh44_4.jpg