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  2. Chopine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chopine

    Often, the fabric of the chopine matched the dress or the shoe, but not always. Despite being highly decorated, chopines often remained hidden under the wearer's skirt, unavailable for any critical observation, but the design of the shoes caused the wearer to have a very "comical walk". [4] [5]

  3. Poulaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poulaine

    A woodcut of Kraków (Latin: Cracovia) in Poland from the 1493 Nuremberg Chronicle. The usual English name poulaine [1] [2] (/ p u ˈ l eɪ n /) is a borrowing and clipping of earlier Middle French soulers a la poulaine ("shoes in the Polish fashion") from the style's supposed origin in medieval Poland. [3]

  4. Patten (shoe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patten_(shoe)

    Pattens were worn during the Middle Ages outdoors, and in public places, over (outside of) the thin soled shoes of that era. Pattens were worn by both men and women during the Middle Ages, and are especially seen in art from the 15th century; a time when poulaines—shoes with very long, pointed toes—were particularly in fashion.

  5. Pigache - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigache

    It appeared in Medieval Latin as pigacia [3] [4] and pigatia. [5] The pigache is also known as the pigage , [ 6 ] pulley shoe , [ 7 ] [ 8 ] pulley toe , [ 1 ] or pulley-toe shoe . [ 9 ] Less often, Orderic Vitalis 's terms of opprobrium are reworked into names: scorpion's tail or ram's horn shoe . [ 10 ]

  6. 1400–1500 in European fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1400–1500_in_European...

    Margherita Portinari, a banker's daughter of Bruges, [46] wears a green dress laced up the front with a single lace over a dark kirtle. Her hair is worn loose under a black cap with a pendant jewel, Netherlands, 1476–1478. Children's clothing during the Italian Renaissance reflected that of their parents.

  7. 1300–1400 in European fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1300–1400_in_European...

    St John the Baptist wears his iconographical clothes, but the sainted English kings Edward the Confessor and Edmund the Martyr are in contemporary royal dress. The Wilton Diptych 1395–99. Wool was the most important material for clothing, due to its numerous favourable qualities, such as the ability to take dye and its being a good insulator. [5]

  8. Bast shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bast_shoe

    Bast shoes are shoes made primarily from bast — fiber taken from the bark of trees such as linden. They are a kind of basket, woven and fitted to the shape of a foot. Bast shoes are a traditional footwear of the forest areas of Northeastern Europe, formerly worn by poorer members of the Finnic peoples, Balts, Russians, and Belarusians. They ...

  9. Duckbill shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duckbill_shoe

    [1] [2] Duckbill shoes were rounded like a duck's bill; cowsmouth shoes widened abruptly at the toes; and bearsclaw shoes had slashes parallel to the toes, so the toe could expand laterally. There is a surviving design for a duckbill shoe by Albrecht Dürer ; he describes it as made on an absolutely straight, symmetric last, and as having an ...

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