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  2. Thigh-high boots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thigh-high_boots

    Fendi [21] supported the thigh boot cause in Autumn 2008 with a chunky suede boot that featured a metallic leather accent around the ankle of the boot and at the top of the heel. The boot was carried by several different retail outlets and was available in black, brown, taupe, and gray.

  3. 17 of the Best Heeled Boots and Booties for Fall - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/17-best-heeled-boots...

    Tall Heeled Boots 1. Our Absolute Favorite: When it comes to sleek, timeless fashion, you can’t go wrong with these knee-high Franco Sarto boots and their 3.5-inch block heels!

  4. High-heeled shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-heeled_shoe

    In the early post-war period, brown and white pumps with cutouts or ankle straps combined with an open toe were some of the most fashionable women's heels. [20] For many women in the West, high-heeled shoes began to symbolize professionalism, whereas leather and rubber thick-heeled boots for men came to be associated with militarism and ...

  5. Court shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_shoe

    By Victorian times, evening footwear was pumps when there would be dancing or music (hence the name opera shoe or opera slipper), and patent leather dress boots otherwise. Pumps remained as standard with evening full dress until the 1930s. [2] At that time, the dress boot was also going out of fashion, as laced shoes began to be worn at all times.

  6. Fashion boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion_boot

    The defining character of the boot is the length of the shaft. Ankle boots generally have a shaft height of less than 8 inches (20 cm), calf-length boots 8–15 inches (20–38 cm), knee-length boots 15–19 inches (38–48 cm), while over-the knee boots have shaft lengths of 19 inches (38 cm) or more; however these divisions are arbitrary and ...

  7. Patent leather - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patent_leather

    Riding boot from 1910–1920s. An early reference to patent leather is in the 1793 British periodical The Bee, or Literary Weekly Intelligencer, which notes, in an article entitled "Hand's patent leather", that "a gentleman of the name of Hand" in Birmingham, England, obtained a patent for preparing flexible leather having a glaze and polish that renders it impervious to water and need only be ...