ladies' mules, c. 1875-1900, Northern Italy or Portugal
I would love some fur-lined mules, please.
ladies' oxfords, c. 1885-1900, England
eat your heart out Christian Louboutin
graduation project, 2010, Lieke de Konig
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orthopedic "surgery boot", 1930s
interesting if not exactly attractive |
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ladies' clogs, c. 1850-75, Normandy, France
exquisite!
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rain shoes, early 20th c, China
clever |
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men's work shoes, indigo cloth and iron studs, mid-20th c, Guizhou Province, China
studded soles would be fun |
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ladies' stilted clogs, Philippines, early 20th c
I just love these, not sure why |
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farmer's clogs, mid-20th c, China |
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mules, c. 1940s-50s, American
very "South Pacific"! |
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"horse shoes", 2008, Iris Schieferstein
surprisingly appealing |
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chopine, late 16th c, Italy
velvet with metallic embroidery and metal studs: a nice combination |
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mill clogs, early 20th c, Leeds, England
I like the metal reinforcements and the little pinked detail.
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ladies' "slap-sole" shoes, early 18th c, England
(the bottom protective sole "slaps" freely like a flip flop)
shoes with matching protective leather patten, c. 1700, england
leather wood and metal pattens, c.1720-30, england
I love this idea. I cannot believe no one is creating shoes with pattens! |
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boot with protective overshoe, late 19th c, Turkey
Brilliant, no? I would wear something like this in a second. |
In spring a young girl's Fancy turns to... shoes. compiled from various sources: www.powerhousemuseum.com/ www.virtualshoemuseum.com/ www.batashoemuseum.ca/ www.vads.ahds.ac.uk/
http://collections.vam.ac.uk/ |
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