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  2. Fashion boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion_boot

    By contrast, in 1977, boots made up 20 percent of all women's shoe sales in the United States [60] and the end of the decade saw fashion boots occupying multiple pages of mainstream mail-order catalogs by companies such as Sears, [61] Wards, [62] and Kays. [63] The early 1970s were typified by tight-fitting, vinyl boots rising to the knee or ...

  3. Thigh-high boots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thigh-high_boots

    Thigh-high boots, known also as thigh-length boots or simply thigh boots, are boots that extend above the knees to at least mid-thigh. Other terms for this footwear include over-the-knee boots, a name originally used for 15th century riding boots for men. These are sometimes called pirate boots, especially when cuffed. Over-the-knee boots are ...

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  5. Top (clothing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_(clothing)

    A top is an item of clothing that covers at least the chest, but which usually covers most of the upper human body between the neck and the waistline. [1] The bottom of tops can be as short as mid-torso, or as long as mid-thigh. Men's tops are generally paired with pants, and women's with pants or skirts.

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  9. Cavalier boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavalier_boot

    By the reign of James I boots had replaced shoes as the most popular footwear among the upper classes, who often wore them indoors, even with spurs. [3] By the 1620s they resembled the boots worn by the Three Musketeers, with a flared bucket-shaped top and high wooden heels similar to those on cowboy boots.