On an average shoe with six pairs of eyelets, there are almost 2 Trillion ways to feed a shoelace through those twelve eyelets! Impossible? This page shows the maths behind that extraordinary number.

Shoe Lacing Mathematics

It hardly seems possible that there could be quite that many ways to feed a shoelace through twelve eyelets! So let's look at the mathematics:

Feed through one of 12 eyelets from either inside or outside. That's 24 possible ways to start.

Continue through one of 11 remaining eyelets from either inside or outside (×22 more ways).

Then 10 remaining eyelets (×20 more ways). We've only gone through three eyelets and we're already up to 24×22×20 = 10,560 ways!

By the time we reach the last eyelet (×2 more ways), the possible ways have multiplied to 24×22×20×18×16×14×12×10×8×6×4×2 ways, a staggering total of 1,961,990,553,600.

That's almost 2 TRILLION possibilities!

In more general mathematical notation, if “n” is the total number of eyelets, then the formula for the total possible paths through those eyelets is:

paths = n!×2n

Thus for the above example of six pairs of eyelets = twelve eyelets, the total number of paths is: 12!×212 = 1,961,990,553,600.

Duplicate Paths

This number of possible paths can be halved for those that are mirror-images of other paths. Similarly, the number can be halved again for those that follow the identical path from opposite ends. Actually, it's a bit more than half because some opposite-end duplicates have already been eliminated as mirror-image duplicates. Even so, this still results in at least 500 billion unique paths.

Additional Complexities

In addition to the basic mathematics of passing through the eyelets, we can multiply by the many different ways the shoelaces can be crossed or interwoven prior to passing through those eyelets (as shown at right), and multiply again if we allow the laces to either pass through any eyelet more than once or skip any eyelet, and even more if we use two or more laces per shoe. This results in almost infinite possibilities, limited mainly by the length of the shoelaces.

Real-World Constraints

In the real world however, we can place some sensible constraints, such as:

The lace should generally start and finish from the top pair of eyelets.

The lace should pass through each eyelet only once.

Each eyelet should contribute to pulling together the sides of the shoe.

The lacing should not be too difficult to tighten or loosen.

Any pattern formed should be relatively stable.

Ignore irrelevant variations (eg. changing the direction through a single eyelet).

Above all, the finished result should be visually pleasing.

So how many possible ways are there to lace a shoe with twelve eyelets if we DO take into account some or all of the above constraints? This requires far more complicated maths than the simple multiplications above. For example:

The above combinatorial equation came from research by Australian mathematician Burkard Polster, who caused a sudden worldwide surge of scientific and academic interest in the mathematics of shoelacing following the publication of an article in the respected journal “Nature” in December 2002.

Although not quoted in the Nature article, Polster's calculation for the number of real-world lacing methods for a typical shoe with 12 eyelets came to 43,200.

Conclusion

I'm sure that the number of Shoe Lacing Methods on this website is destined to grow as I discover more worthwhile methods from the thousands of possibilities that I haven't yet explored.