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  2. 14 Stylish Slingback Heels That Take Your Look to New Heights

    www.aol.com/14-stylish-slingback-heels-look...

    Slingback heels are the It-pumps of the season, and here are the best styles to pick up now.

  3. List of shoe styles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shoe_styles

    Shoe designers have described a very large number of shoe styles, including the following: Leather ballet shoes, with feet shown in fifth position. A cantabrian albarca is a rustic wooden shoe in one piece, which has been used particularly by the peasants of Cantabria, northern Spain.

  4. Peep-toe shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peep-toe_shoe

    A pair of peep-toe shoes. A peep-toe shoe is a woman's shoe (usually a pump, slingback, bootie, or any other dress shoe) in which there is an opening at the toe box which allows the toes to show. Peep-toe shoes were popular beginning in the 1940s [1] [2] but disappeared by the 1960s. [3]

  5. Slingback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slingback

    A slingback is a type of woman's footwear characterized by an ankle strap that crosses only around the back and sides of the ankle and heel, whereas a typical strap completely encircles the ankle all the way around it. It typically has a low vamp front similar to that of classic full shoe heels.

  6. Wedge (footwear) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedge_(footwear)

    Light blue peeptoe wedge heels. Wedge boots, wedgies, or lifties are shoes and boots with a sole in the form of a wedge, such that one piece of material, normally rubber, serves as both the sole and the heel. This design dates back to ancient Greece. [1] Greek Actors used to wear these shoes to signify status.

  7. Spool heel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spool_Heel

    Evening pumps with spool heel (1918), A.E. Little & Co. A spool heel is a shoe heel that is wide at the top and bottom and narrower in the middle, [1] so resembling a cotton spool or an hourglass. [2] Spool heels were fashionable in Europe during the Baroque [3] and Rococo [4] periods.