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Historically, it was men who wore heels

Feminists who rebuke heels, hold your horses. Elizabeth Semmelhack is the curator of the Bata Shoe Museum in Toronto and author of Heights of Fashion: A History of the Elevated Shoe (Periscope 2008, $32.95). She explained that heels started with men.

Stilted platforms go back to ancient Greece and Roman bathhouses.

heels

High heels with a pointed heel and a sloping pitch were first worn by men as riding boots in 9th-century Persia.

During the Renaissance, women wore mega-high chopines – platforms stacked heavily at the toe – reaching about eight inches high (some were rumoured to reach up to 20 inches). The height “had to do with a display of family wealth and conspicuous consumption,” Semmelhack said.

Chopines were eventually adopted by prostitutes in Florence and Sicily.

The high-heeled men’s riding boot fad was revived in the 1500s. Queen Elizabeth wore them, too, as she “acted” as a man.

In the early 1700s, King Louis XIV teetered in ornate 5-inches heels. By then, shorter heels were already becoming popular with women.

Desperate times call for higher heels. Heels soared during the Second World War, when metal rods could maintain a strong yet narrow structure. Previously, heels were made from wood and could only go up to three to 31⁄2 inches, Semmelhack said.

Heels proceeded to get higher and lower, alternating from rounded and pointed toes. They also took on several connotations that echoed their history: glamorous, powerful, oppressive, sexy, and illicit.

The platform shoe also had its moments. In the disco era, men like John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever re-emerged with lifts, a style that evolved with rock stars like David Bowie and Prince.

In 1993, supermodel Naomi Campbell took a tumble on Vivienne Westwood’s runway thanks to a pair of show-stopping heels.

Who can forget Carrie Bradshaw of Sex and the City? She inspired many women to feel sexy and liberated with the help of Manolo Blahnik and Jimmy Choo.

Christian Louboutin shoes have been described as 'sex on legs'

"Ze point is, eet's more provocative to show a low toe cleavage zan eet is wearing sandals that reveal all. In flip-flops you see everything but zat ees not at all sexy."
French wrench weemen 'ate ! cleavage but I sink of eet as ze second decollete" states shoe designer christian louboutin in his accented, almost pantomime French.
Christian Louboutin
Until recently, Louboutin was one of fashion's best-kept secrets: worn by those who sit front row at the shows, the well-heeled and celebrities with style integrity.

However, the current demand for increasingly niche, de luxe labels means Louboutin has attracted a growing clientele for whom the fact that he is not a household name is all part of the appeal. This, coupled with the fact that court shoes (a Louboutin signature - whether platform, wedge or stack-heeled), have never been more de rigueur, means the shoe couturier is experiencing something of a moment.

Clearly for christian louboutin, the devil's in the details. Having dedicated practically his life's work to creating sensually explicit shoes that fetishise the foot in a subtle game of hide and seek, the 43-year-old knows a thing or two about provocative footwear. "Ze curved inside part of ze foot, ze instep, is ze most sexy part so I like to close ze heel and reveal ze arch," he adds, imparting yet another sartorial footwear maxim.
Christian Louboutin
"Christian's absolutely having a moment right now," confirms Kurt Geiger's buying and creative director Rebecca Farrar-Hockley. "The minute we receive a delivery of his shoes, they sell out. Keeping up with the demand is becoming quite difficult." That Louboutin's bijou Chelsea store recently sold in a day what it used to sell in a month three years ago would only seem to support such claims. Indeed, it would seem Louboutin's high-heeled, sculptural designs have spellbound a whole new set of adoring and loyal devotees. "christian louboutin shoes is a magician, obsessed with beauty, legs and feet," purrs one of his biggest fans, the fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg. "He understands women and makes them feel like Cinderellas."
Christian Louboutin
Such an aesthetic is, Louboutin believes, linked to two incidents when he was a child: one a visit to a local museum' the other to a fairground. "I have two memories. One that corresponds to the first drawing of a shoe that I ever saw and one that corresponds to the first shoe I was interested in. Near where my parents lived there was a museum that was an extremely beautiful building. Because of the mosaics on the floor there was a little sign when you entered.

"A good shoe is one that doesn't dress you but undresses you," explains the man himself, citing Helmut Newton's stiletto-clad Amazonian nudes as an example of what he is getting at. "So if a woman is naked, and still wearing shoes, she should still look nude." Naked or dressed to the nines, the Parisian's creations are a statement in their own right. While his shoes are sexy, they never cross over into "va va voom" territory. Instead his lacy, peep-toe heels, chiffon pleat platforms and crystal-heeled courts evoke the key-lit sexuality of screen starlets from a bygone era.
Christian Louboutin
It was a high heel in profile with a red cross running through it because it was forbidden to wear heels in the mosaic floors," recounts louboutin. "But my first memory of a real shoe was at a funfair near where I lived. I saw a woman who was literally wearing exactly the same shoe as the one on the sign in the museum. So I followed her. She was all in black and had the same type of hair as Kim Novak in Vertigo - but a very fat version. Then she went behind a Ferris wheel and suddenly I was grabbed from behind and punched and asked what I was doing. I realised I had been following a prostitute who was about to go with a client and I had been grabbed by her pimp."

That both memories revolve around shoes that were either considered forbidden or illicit is, according to Louboutin, a huge factor in having shaped his oeuvre. So too is the fact that what imprinted itself on his psyche was footwear that harked back to the refined chic of the Fifties - a period that continues to influence his work.
Christian Louboutin
Born in 1963, Louboutin was a child of the Seventies. Seeking refuge from the decade he found himself growing up in, he immersed himself in the sex-ualised glamour of the world of French music hall revues. By 14, he was already a familiar face at the Moulin Rouge and Folies Bergre. His passion for dancing and showgirls disrupted his schoolwork to such a degree that he stopped at-tending altogether. By now, he'd set his heart on designing shoes for showgirls, and so at 16, pitched up at the Folies Bergre. "I arrived in the middle of a rehearsal and it was great. I had drawings of shoes for every girl, I knew all their names," he chirrups. "The girls saw my drawings and were like 'wow, what is that, this little boy, how sweet you are' and I became a little mascot."

The Folies Bergre was where Louboutin's shoe apprenticeship began. Although he never actually ended up realising his dream, he was able to channel what he'd observed about the showgirls and their shoe requirements into the shoes he later designed. From the Folies, he went to work for Charles Jour-dan in 1981. Freelance stints at Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent followed, before Louboutin launched his own label and opened his first boutique in 1991.

"For a showgirl, shoes are very important. They provide them with their stability. They need to be beautiful and sexy but not steal the limelight," explains Louboutin of the valuable lessons he'd learnt back in the 1970s that he still applies to his shoes today. "First you should see the girl, her body, her shape. Shoes need to be able to both appear and disappear. They can't be clunky either. Even if they have a platform sole, it has to be hidden. I learnt all of this from the showgirls because their shoes are their weapons of seduction."

Granted, Louboutin is not known for designing sensible flats. However, according to the designer, his high-heeled signature not only evokes the high-octane aesthetic of the showgirls, but also his experience of growing up in a household of women. "I was born and raised in a really feminine environment. I have four sisters. My younger sister is 12 years older than me," he explains. "So when I was six, she was 18 and the rest were in their twenties. It was really funny to be a small boy in a tall, female environment."

In spite of the fact that Louboutin's heels teeter on the seemingly impractical, comfort, he insists, is high on his list of shoe musts. "I don't believe that one has to suffer to be beautiful," says the Frenchman, who enlists the women in his company to test-drive every pair he designs. "If you suffer in your shoes, it shows in your face. I don't see why any woman should be in pain."

He designs his collections in environments that proffer zero distractions from his second great passion: gardening. "I design the winter collection in winter, in my country house in France where it is cold and the garden is miserable so I don't go out into it," says Louboutin, who briefly turned his hand to landscape gardening in the late 1980s. "And the summer is done in Egypt. The great thing about Egypt is I have a boat. You're stuck on it and can't be distracted. And you're constantly moving so even if you sat on a chair and drew all day, you can go, 'ah I feel like I've done a lot of exercise today!'"

Undoubtedly the collaborations Louboutin's racked up over the years to design the catwalk shoes for the likes of ChloZ, Lanvin, McQueen, Viktor & Rolf, Jean Paul Gaultier, YSL and Roland Mouret, have been profile-raising. But it's his whimsical decision to lacquer the soles of his shoes an eye-popping red that has proved to be one of the canniest marketing strategies.

"Actually it's gone beyond being my trademark," chuckles Louboutin. "Once a woman came into the store and said you have to do my wedding shoes because I am getting married because of you. It turns out she had been stopped in the street by a man who had started the conversation by saying he loved the red soles of her shoes. They ended up dating and getting engaged. She said it was because of the shoes. So you see, I can't stop doing red soles." Nor, it would seem, shoes that women continue to fall head over heels in love with.

'I don't believe that one has to suffer to be beautiful. If you suffer in your shoes, it shows in your face. Why should any woman be in pain?'

Anna Wintour breaks her silence

What is Anna Wintour really like?

Anna Wintour

Anna Wintour has always had an aura of unapproachable mysteriousness. This is probably to do with the media's portrayal of her, but is also because we've only ever seen her sitting on front row at fashion shows and have never heard her speak. So when we found out she was to appear on the Late Show with David Letterman, we were intrigued. Would she be as icy as her reputation suggests? Would she take off those damned sunglasses? Can she actually speak at all?


On watching it, the first thing that struck us was her accent (yes, she can speak). Somewhere in the back of our minds we knew she was British, but we were still expecting an American accent. What we got was one of those godawful hybrids, reminiscent of Sharon Osbourne: a voice that is English for the most part, but lifts up in a questioning tone but at the end of every sentence. Ugh.

The editrix also attempted a joke or too, or at least, we think she did. She wore her trademark oversized sunglasses out to greet David Letterman, before taking them off for the interview. Wintour's second hilarious joke (the sunglasses gag was the first, in case it was too subtle for you) came when Letterman asked her: "Have you ever put anybody into a headlock?" Cue an awkward pause, then the deadpan reply: "Maybe you."

Could she not have got one of her writers to script a couple of rib-ticklers for her?

Anna Wintour

It was all rather forced, but then what did we expect? A jolly Anna Wintour, bursting with bonhomie and exuberance? We would have watched with baited breath had Anna suddenly started divulging all the behind-the-scenes gossip at Vogue, but let's get real; it was never going to happen. She is a cold fish, an ice queen, a nuclear Wintour, and that's why we like her. We like the idea that one arched eyebrow can send her minions scurrying away, as if it meant "OFF WITH HER HEAD!".

A nice Anna Wintour would be unnatural and wrong, like a friendly piranha fish.

Kitten heels an option for those who don't like sky-high shoes

Those so-called statement shoes with their platforms, sky-high heels and fetish straps are the most ridiculous of my lifetime. Podiatrists must be having a field day. What's a sensible, fashion-aware woman in her 40s to wear? Please comment.

Kitten heels

Shoes with kitten heels are right now the cat's meow -- and the answer to your needs. Thanks to first lady Michelle Obama, fashion is once again purring over little heels, aka kitten heels.

Shoe guru Manolo Blahnik, who designed the kitten-heeled mule illustrated here, says the first time he heard the heel described as such was from Mary Quant and Tuffin and Foale when they talked about shoes worn by "London's little kitten girls from the '60s. "Penelope Tree, Twiggy, all those girls -- the kitten heel was named for them," says Blahnik, who describes the height as generally 1¾ inch.

The sheath dresses Obama also helped popularize look especially au courant with the kitten. You could say the first lady is smitten with the kitten. (Sorry, I couldn't resist.) As you can imagine, this heel height is especially helpful to tall women, like Michelle Obama.

Kitten heels

End The Trend: Gladiator Sandals

Classical garb is always good for a flattering fallback: loose fabrics easily cover an unruly paunch, headbands disguise greasy hair, and gladiator sandals…oh wait…no, gladiator sandals are never a flattering fallback.

In a city where professional ladies are accustomed to wearing stiff attire, the summer should be a time to revel in moderately relaxed luxury—which does not include transparently faddish trends. Yet, the past few years have seen a rise in be-strapped sandals, which evolved from shredded strips of leather to gratuitously entangled bondage numbers to bizarre cloth encasings that offer neither the protective purpose of shoes nor the airy appeal of sandals. Sure, these are feats of artistic design, but the off-runway look is genuinely unforgiving for those of us who don’t have 9-foot-long legs. The core of the design—excessive ankle straps—conceals one of the most shapely parts of the leg, rendering calves into tube-like noodles without form or curve. Even those blessed with tiny ankles and slim stems look stumpy when wearing a pair of gladiator sandals—the result being more fitting for a hairy, oversized ogre than a graceful Grecian goddess.

In addition to its cankle-inducing effect, the gladiator sandal—which, let’s be honest, is really just a glorified Teva—also suffers from its own trendiness. Minneapolis is not exactly at the cutting edge of the fashion world, but for a city with a lot of class, it’s sad to see the unquestioning embrace of an obvious fad—and a marginally trashy one, at that. If you must—and really, you mustn’t—don a pair of these shoes, at least try to avoid all the bells and whistles: studs, feathers, weird textured fabrics, spider-web casing, etc.

If too much trendiness equals total tackiness, then spin-off iterations—in this case, the gladiator heel and gladiator boot—are even more egregious. While the former can, in select cases, actually look quite sexy (specifically when paired with an otherwise simple outfit), the latter is probably the most ridiculous spawn of this whole wave. And it’s not like it even works on the models either. No, gladiator boots are the worst kind of trend: ugly for the sake of being edgy, but not quite edgy because they’re creatively uncompelling. Then of course there’s the splooge factor, as pinched patches of skin squeeze through the tight, knee-high bands. Unbecoming is an understatement.

Whatever shape or form, gladiator sandals are unflattering and indicate a lack of style originality. There are plenty of kick-ass alternatives in the footwear market—especially during these sultry summer months—so spare yourself the unnecessary humiliation and opt for a simpler look.

If you need any further persuading, just watch these two blonde muppets squawk about “THE. HOTTEST TREND OUT THERE!”, and your warrior fantasies will instantly subside.

These shoes aren't made for walking

Not all shoes are made equal. Some are just bad for your feet.

Here are four shoes which you should think twice about wearing:

Flip-flops or thong slippers. They have flat footbeds that do not support well. Your foot arches flatten and collapse, causing postural problems.


Heels higher than three inches (7.6cm). They bring excessive pressure to the front ball of the foot, which can cause metatarsalgia - pain in the forefoot - and buildup of calluses.

Pointed-toe covered shoes. Narrow toe boxes cramp, causing bunions and hammer toes. Also, they tend to place excess pressure under the ball of foot.

Wedges. Wedges that are too high push weight onto the ball of the foot, like high heels. However, mid-height wedges are good for women's feet as they support the arch region.

If you can't go without slippers or high heels, here are some some tips that you should keep in mind while buying such footwear.

When shopping for slippers, look for a contoured supportive footbed as opposed to a flat one. One example is the Scholl Orthaheel Flip Flop.

Don't go for heels that are more than 4cm in height.

In choosing footwear, it is important to choose shoes with good heel and arch support to assist overall foot and leg posture.

Don't let that price tag scare you if you're looking for quality shoes. Sometimes, it may be worth forking out the extra cash in buying shoes as footwear that utilises higher quality leather materials can assist flexibility and breathability.

Staggering home in a pair of burning high-heels? Now you can buy flats from a vending machine on your night out

We've all been there. It's 2am and you've danced the night away, and now your four-inch heels mean the soles of your feet are burning so much you can barely walk to the cloakroom.

Cue undignified barefoot sprint to a taxi. . .

high-heels

As chiropodists must know, convincing most women that sensible shoes would be a better option is, unfortunately, extremely unlikely to work.

So perhaps weary Louboutin-lovers should instead consider picking up a pair of Rollasoles, which give anyone who can't stagger on their stilettos another option for getting home.

The £5 ballet flats - handily dispensed from vending machines in pubs and bars - are the brainchild of 27-year-old entrepreneur Matt Horan from Bristol.

He came up with the idea after one too many nights out which finished with him giving his girlfriend a piggyback home to save her soles.

His invention has taken off, and Rollasole vending machines are now selling out of their stock in clubs across the UK, Ibiza and the U.S.

Demand is so high that a wedding service is launching soon - apparently Danielle Bux and husband-to-be Gary Lineker have got their order in already.

The heels come in a choice of three colours (black, silver and gold) and sizes (S/M/L) - so modern-day Cinderellas won't struggle to find a slipper that fits.

Then again, with your aching feet sorted, who needs Prince Charming anyway?

Have you ever worn stiletto heels?

Have you ever worn a set of stiletto heels? Bear with me a minute here…I meant to say have any women reading this ever worn stiletto heels before? Somehow the mental picture of two funky old graybeard males needing shaves wearing color-coordinated stiletto heels takes me back to certain places in San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood, a residual memory that still haunts me to this day. We probably do not need to go there.


The advantages, according to the moguls in charge of shoes are that they give the optical illusion of a longer, slimmer leg, a smaller foot, and a greater overall height. They also alter the wearer’s posture and gait, flexing the calf muscles, and making the bust and buttocks more prominent. Some can use the emphasis, some probably should avoid it all possible costs.

stiletto heels

However, stilettos disproportionately result in ankle and foot damage. Given the deplorable condition of the sidewalks and streets in Spokane’s version of the Universal Urban Obstacle Course should leave us asking, is making my butt more prominent worth the cost of orthopaedic surgery from a shattered ankle?


I simply do not understand. Can someone enlighten me before I rush out to one of the shoe emporiums and buy a set of these so-called “wonderful shoes”. Besides I don’t need any emphasis of my big behind nor do I need to waltz into Dempsey’s Brass Rail wearing an air of insouciant pulchritude wearing stiletto heels and cheap perfume.


What about you?

where to find platform heels online?

These days platform heels look great with tweed separates, kints and rich brocades just in time for the fall season. The muted jewel shades in platform heels add flair to even the most conservative office look.platform heels

The best thing about wearing platform shoes it the added height without compromising your balance as much as, say, a pair of stiletto heels. Platform shoes are at the forefront of fashion currently.
platform heels
  • Dig it. Versatile faux leather peeptoe heel has a retro feel. Features stitched seam details on vamp, d'Orsay heel and ankle buckle strap.
  • A hidden platform heel with multiple strap design and cone heel.
  • Cross the fashion barrier wearing these women's Simply Vera Vera Wang platform heels.Strappy design and peep-toe styling offer flirty touches.High heel lengthens your leg for flattering look.
  • Dress up any look with this adorable heel by Contempo Casuals. Featuring a loufer style with a peep toe, 3/4 exposed platform.
  • By Miss Sixty, peep-toe platform shoe with cut out details and zipper trim. Side zip entry and padded footbed.
  • Classically feminine, these peep-toe suede heels feature a 1.25" hidden and stacked platform and 4.75" stacked heel.
  • Fashionably fun suede peep-toe platform pumps from MICHAEL Michael Kors, featuring wide criss-cross straps at the vamp, thinner criss-cross straps at the ankle with a side buckle closure, a covered back and covered cone-shaped high heel.
  • Look ultra haute in these chic patent leather platform sandals from Via Spiga, featuring multiple thin straps at either side of the vamp looping together at the upper and around the ankle, a covered back and high cone-shaped heel.

Choose a style that works well with your wardrobe and is of a high quality. Peep toe platform heels are a classic choice, and gladiator platform sandals are very trendy at the moment. While black or brown is always a safe option that will go with almost anything for the fall season, don't be afraid to try bright colors!

A platform heel offers an ultra-sophisticated look.
Pair your platform heels with:
Trendy Handbags
Chic Clutches

High Heels 'should be banned from the workplace'

Stiletto heels could be banned from the workplace because of health and safety reasons, according to union bosses.

Stiletto heels

The Trade Union Congress, predominantly male, has proposed a motion arguing that high heels are demeaning to women while they also contribute to long term injuries.

They propose instead that women wear "sensible shoes" with an inch heel limit in an attempt to avoid future foot and back pain as well as injuries. The motion is due to be debated at next month's conference.

The motion, tabled by the Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists, states: "Congress believes high heels may look glamorous on the Hollywood catwalks but are completely inappropriate for the day-today working environment.

"Feet bear the brunt of daily life, and for many workers prolonged standing, badly fitted footwear, and in particular high heels can be a hazard. Around two million days a year are lost through sickness as a result of lower limb disorders.

"Wearing high heels can cause long-term foot problems, such as blisters, corns and calluses, and also serious foot, knee and back pain and damaged joints.

"Many employers in the retail sector force women workers to wear high heels as part of their dress code.

"More must be done to raise awareness of this problem so that women workers and their feet are protected."

Nadine Dorries, the Tory MP, however criticised the motion and said the extra height heels give women can help them when in the workplace.

"I'm 5ft 3in and need every inch of my Christian Louboutin heels to look my male colleagues in the eye," she said. "If high heels were banned in Westminster, no one would be able to find me.

"The TUC need to get real, stop using overtly sexist tactics by discussing women's stilettos to divert tension away from Labour chaos."

Michelle Dewberry, a former winner of The Apprentice, said the motion was patronising.

"This is absolutely ridiculous and I think think these union officials should be spending their time dealing with more important issues," she said.

"I'm at work in five-inch heels and perfectly able to do my job. Heels are sexy, they boost your confidence and they are empowering to women.

"I can't imagine these officials debating a motion about how tightly men should wear their ties. Wearing heels is a personal choice."

Fetish Boots (Part 1)




Fetish Boots
Fetish Boots
Fetish Boots

Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels

Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels
Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels
Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels
Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels
Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels
Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels

Paris Hilton: Shoes fashion, High Heels

Women's Footwear Trends 2009 For Every Occasion

Women's Footwear Trends 2009 For Every Occasion

Shoes are the most important accessory in 2009 which is why all fashion conscious ladies should pay extra attention when selecting their shoes for a special occasion. Here is a style guide for shoes that informs you about the kind of shoes you should wear for office, wedding, dating or parties so that you may appear both trendy and elegant.

Shoes For Job and Professional Meeting

You choice of shoes for a job or professional meeting should be sensible and at the same time stylish enough to make you look well-groomed. Following the current fashion trend you should choose stylish court shoes, feminine Mary Jane’s, classic mules or simple sandals etc. Though high heels are in trend, it’s not advisable to wear extremely high heels in the office as it will be considered too trendy and won’t be comfortable. Black is a must have colour but you may go in for shoes with other neutral shades to avoid monotony. While the detailing of shoes is very much in trend this summer, avoid wearing them to the office unless of course you are in a profession where you are expected to look ultra-stylish all the time.

Read Full Article at http://www.high-heel-shoes.co.uk/articles/womens-footwear-trends-for-2009-every-occasion.html

Use Attractive Party Shoes to Win Attention

A gorgeous looking pair of high heel party shoes can add oodles of oomph to your style. Find out what’s the big deal about high heel party shoes and how to choose a perfect pair. This article also discusses the advantages of high heel shoes and how you can buy them online.

Why high heel party shoes are popular?

Party shoes are a must have shoe in every woman’s wardrobe. Stylists feel that women should keep updating their collection of high heel party shoes by shopping for the latest designs. This will ensure that they are ever ready to attend every party confidently and stylishly. A good collection of party shoes will also help you wear different shoes with your party outfits so that you are not always seen in those same old black high heel shoes. When you keep wearing new and different shoes, you’ll receive more attention than you ever got before. Trust us, even celebs are using high heel shoes to get attention. I know you are thinking of Victoria Beckham, Beyonce… well, why not add your name also to the list!

Stilettos – The Pleasure of Wearing Dagger-Like Heels

Stilettos – The Pleasure of Wearing Dagger-Like Heels

Needle like stiletto heels have come to rule the shoe world. The dangerous, yet very feminine heels are getting thinner and higher by the day and women are going even crazier for shoes adorned with stiletto heels. This article discusses the advantages of wearing high heel stilettos and how to learn to walk in stiletto shoes. Also find out more about the types of stilettos and the colours available online.

It is not without reason that women are eager to put their feet on the mercy of a thin long heel that they are very well-aware may give them pain and bunions overtime. There are key benefits to wearing the dagger like stiletto shoes. Listed here are some of the innate advantages of wearing stiletto shoes:

  • Stilettos accentuate the female form. It forces the back to arch, pushing the bosom forward and the buttocks out backward.
  • High heel stiletto shoes make a woman appear taller.
  • Stilettos make women adopt a more graceful step. To maintain their balance on a thin heel, women start to sway their hips in a seductive manner.
  • Stiletto shoes also make a woman's leg appear shapelier. High heels elongate the lines of the legs making them appear slimmer and longer.
  • The elevation of the heels makes your legs appear several inches longer and also sexier.
  • Over all, wearing a seductive pair of high heel shoes makes a woman feel curvier and more attractive.
http://www.high-heel-shoes.co.uk/articles/stilettos-the-pleasure-of-wearing-dagger-like-heels.html

Boost Your Sex Appeal With Sexy High Heel Boots

http://www.high-heel-shoes.co.uk/articles/boost-your-sex-appeal-with-sexy-high-heel-boots.html

Boost Your Sex Appeal With Sexy High Heel Boots

Boots are the ultimate sexy footwear for women. Their innate sex appeal has simply no parallel. Find out why women crave a pair sexy high heel boots and why they feel like a sex goddess when they dare to wear them. This article also talks about a variety of boots and current fashion trends in sexy high heel boots.

Why women are crazy about boots?

Though very few women dare to wear, sexy high heel boots they are a fantasy for most women – and for men! Boots, especially the fetish thigh high boots and knee high boots, have an intrinsic magnetic appeal that makes a woman look amazingly sexy or seductively naughty depending on her attitude. Women who wear them love the head turning quality of high heel boots. Women love to be noticed and will definitely get seen wearing a seductive pair of boots. The confidence levels of women wearing high heel boots can reach sky high levels as she receives far too many yearning glances from males and jealous stares from females.

10 Tips For Choosing The Perfect Pair of Evening High Heel Shoes

10 Tips For Choosing The Perfect Pair of Evening High Heel Shoes

A great pair of perfectly fitting evening shoes will really turn head at your next fancy do. With fashion gurus claiming that shoes are the ‘it’ fashion accessory you just cannot dare to be careless in selecting your evening high heel shoes. This article offers you all the details and tips you’ll ever need to choose the perfect pair of party shoes.

Where to wear evening shoes and why?

Also known as dress shoes, evening high heel shoes are the shoes that you wear along with your going out dresses while attending a special occasion such as a wedding, prom, a special date, birthday or anniversary party etc. You might also want to wear your evening shoes at Christmas or Easter parties, office functions and clubs or at a special get-together organised by your friends. You should pay extra attention to all aspects of your dressing and most importantly shoes because it’s a real opportunity to give that perfect finishing sparkle to your outfit. As a golden rule, your party shoes should always be perfectly fitting and fit seamless well with your dress. Being up to date with the trends will make you look even more glamorous and make your female friends turn green with envy.

Read Full Article at http://www.high-heel-shoes.co.uk/articles/10-tips-for-choosing-the-perfect-pair-of-evening-high-heel-shoes.html