Alu_Rathbone

Number of posts: 1951 Age: 21 Location: Wants her own Euro Trip... perhaps you can help? House: Carlisle Registration date: 2008-03-20
 | Subject: The History fof The High Heel Mon Mar 09, 2009 7:40 am | |
| Raised heels are stated[ to have been a response to the problem of the rider's foot slipping forward in stirrups while riding. The "rider's heel," approximately 1-1/2 inch (4 cm) high, appeared around 1500. The leading edge was canted forward to help grip the stirrup, and the trailing edge was canted forward to prevent the elongated heel from catching on underbrush or rock while backing up, such as in on-foot combat. These features are evident today in riding boots, notably cowboy boots.
The simple riding heel gave way to a more stylized heel over its first three decades. Beginning with the French, heel heights among men crept up, often becoming higher and thinner, until they were no longer useful while riding, but were relegated to "court-pony" wear. By the late 1600s men's heels were commonly between three and four inches in height.
In 1533, the diminutive wife of the Duke of Orleans, Catherine de' Medici, commissioned a cobbler to fashion her a pair of heels, both for fashion, and to increase her stature. They were an adaptation of chopines (elevated wooden soles with both heel and toe raised not unlike modern platform shoes), but unlike chopines the heel was higher than the toe and the "platform" was made to bend in the middle with the foot.
High-heeled shoes quickly caught on with the fashion-conscious men and women of the French court, and spread to pockets of nobility in other countries. The term "well-heeled" became synonymous with opulent wealth. Both men and women continued wearing heels as a matter of noble fashion throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. When the French Revolution drew near, in the late 1700s, the practice of wearing heels fell into decline in France due to its associations with wealth and aristocracy. Throughout most of the 1800s, flat shoes and sandals were usual for both sexes, but the heel resurfaced in fashion during the late 1800s, almost exclusively among women.
x-x-x So there you go ladies, the heel was originally designed for men and if it wasn't for Catherine De Medici, we wouldn't have the pain and suffering of the heel today. So don't killl the inventor, who is not mentioned... surprise surprise, but the woman who brought it to fashion for women every where!_________________ Proud Memember Of The House Of Carlisle! Member of the Anti-Liars club! Betrayers don't need memorials! Banner made by the wonderfully mysterious Tsuki!!! |
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down.the.rabbit.hole

Number of posts: 3421 Age: 17 Location: Frolicking in the depths of insaniy House: Alice. Pixy. Perfect. Priceless. Honorary member of Esme & Carlisle Registration date: 2008-04-10
 | Subject: Re: The History fof The High Heel Mon Mar 09, 2009 10:39 pm | |
| wow interesting I would never have though that was why. _________________ This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper The Hollow Men T.S. Eliot |
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