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  2. Katie Holmes Is Bringing Wedges Back This Spring — Shop Her Style

    www.aol.com/entertainment/katie-holmes-bringing...

    franco-sarto-wedges 13 Secretly Supportive Sandals You Could Walk Miles In Wear these shoes Holmes-style this spring by pairing them with a cozy sweater, oversized trousers and a tote bag.

  3. 15 Platform Loafers to Elevate Your Outfits this Spring - AOL

    www.aol.com/15-platform-loafers-elevate-outfits...

    Agathea Chunky Loafer. Introducing texture and bold patterns to your footwear can instantly elevate the energy of your outfit. Consider these Gigi Hadid-approved platform loafers from Reformation ...

  4. 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.

  5. Platform shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platform_shoe

    An example of a 20-centimetre (8-inch) platform clear heel Platform sandals with wooden sole Platform boot, ankle length Lucite platform shoes. Platform shoes are shoes, boots, or sandals with a thick sole, usually in the range of 5–10 cm (2–4 in). Platform shoes may also be high heels, in which case the heel is raised significantly higher ...

  6. Slip-on shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slip-on_shoe

    The Spaulding family in New Hampshire started making shoes based on this design in the early 1930s, [citation needed] naming them loafers, a general term for slip-on shoes which is still in use in America. In 1934, G.H. Bass (a bootmaker in Wilton, Maine) started making loafers under the name Weejuns (sounding like Norwegians). [18]

  7. Zori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zori

    Zori (/ ˈ z ɔː r i /), also rendered as zōri (Japanese: 草履 ( ぞうり ), Japanese pronunciation: [d͡zo̞ːɾʲi]), are thonged Japanese sandals made of rice straw, cloth, lacquered wood, leather, rubber, or—most commonly and informally—synthetic materials. [1] They are a slip-on descendant of the tied-on waraji sandal. [2]

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