Posts Tagged ‘designer shoes’

Operah Winfrey To Sell Designer Shoes

I think I’d struggle to find anybody who wouldn want to step into Oprah Winfrey’s metphorical shoes. Read the rest of this entry »

Amy Winehouse Replaces Drugs with Designer Shoes!

We’ve all heard outrageous stories of celebrity spending. With Michael Jackson’s recent death, there have even be TV shows made about the phenomena! Read the rest of this entry »

Lindsay Lohan To Sell Designer Shoes Collection

Lindsay Lohan has agreed to let Style Network’s Clean House to go though her house and rid her of her plethora of possessions – including the massive collection of designer shoes! Read the rest of this entry »

The Dream Comes True – Chocolate Shoes!

Without being grossly stereotypical, there’s possibly only one thing women are as known to love as much as shoes…chocolate! How strange then, that nobody has even come up with the concept of combing the two…oh wait…

Would you believe it if I told you somebody (a cake maker, in fact) has actually launched a range of chocolate designer shoes? No? I’m not surprised, but it doesn’t stop the story being true; Frances Cooley found a chocolate shoe mould in Belgium and BAM, that’s all the inspiration she needed to create her own brand of chocolate shoes. Crazy? Apparently not, as the shoes have been “selling like hot cakes” according to Frances – and she’d know, what with having quit her job as a graphic designer to become a cake-maker!

Chocolate Shoes

The process involved in the shoe-making sounds quite simple, but is almost certainly harder than you’d expect. She starts by piping design into the shoe-mould and then fills it with tempered Belgian chocolate. Once cooled, she pours out the excess and leaves it to set, before hand-decorating each one. When they are complete, she sells them in over 25 delicatessens and boutiques (including Liberty luxury department store) for £8.50 for a small pair or £21 for a single large shoe.

I love it!

Covering Scuff Marks on Leather Designer Shoes

Here at the Designer Shoes Blog, we aim to bring you handy advice and news. After our post about the impact of the recession on the shoe industry, it seems clear more and more of you are choosing to mend or polish-up your old shoes, rather than buying brand new ones. So today we thought I’d help out by providing you dear readers with some advice on e the effectively covering up the scruffs on your leather shoes – so they look great and last longer!

Designer Shoes

Ever wondered why army boots look so good after months of stomping around? It’s because getting scuffs out of leather shoes is simple; all you need is a damp sponge, a shoe brush and some form of shoe polish. Although wax is the best option for covering scruffs, creams comes in far more colours – so they might be more appropriate. To start with, remove your laces (if you have any) and, using the damp sponge, clean your shoes to remove all the surface dirt. Once they are sparkling clean, apply the polish (wax or cream) and rub it into the leather using small, circular motions. Once you’ve covered all the leather, remove any blobs of excess polish and finally buff the leather with the shoe brush. Good as new!

Impact of Recession on Designer Shoes

Published today, official research into the recession has revealed that shoes were one of the biggest things to be cut from family spending during the 2008 period of economic decline. According to the Office for National Statistics, spending on shoes and clothes in 2008 was the lowest since 2001, despite the fact that average household spending actually rose by £12 per week from 2007.

Designer Shoes

Although it could well be that the recession is causing people to cut back on their spending on ‘luxury’ items like designer shoes, it has also been suggested that the recession has been accompanied by huge discount at clothes and shoes shops, as well as massive price reductions in products like designer shoes. This implies that it is not necessarily the case that people are buying less shoes – but possibly that it’s costing people less to buy them. If the area I’m living in is a reliable source of evidence, I’m going to assume the latter is true! I, for one, haven’t cut down on my shoe-buying at all – it’s the last thing I’d give up! As for sales, I can’t remember the last time I haven’t been able to find one to suit my needs.

In case you’re interested; people in Wales spent the least on shoes in 2008, followed by Scotland, then England and finally Northern Ireland, who spent the most.

The Philosophy of Shoes

Although there are many strange and wonderful shoes out there, some really challenge the notion of what it is to be a shoe. My recent posts about crazy designer shoes have, as many crazy things will do, made me challenge my very concept of shoes – here are my musings.

Most definitions of the word ‘shoe’ involve the words “covering” or “protecting”; “a protective covering for the foot, originally designed for comfort and durability, but more recently also for decoration” was along the lines of my own definition. However, many hyper-fashionable trends and individual pairs of shoes are now challenging that very definition; many shoes are now uncomfortable, don’t cover the foot at all and are actually more dangerous than not wearing any shoes at all! The question is, are these still ‘shoes’? If so, then our previous definition must be wrong and need altering – but to what? If these new objects are not shoes, then what are they?

Although many people would consider the first pair of shoes in Return of the Crazy Designer Shoes to be ridiculous, I think most would agree that they are, nevertheless, shoes of some kind. Yet all they are is a kind of metal cage around the foot, so this raises interesting questions; just how little material can still constitute a shoe? Which parts of an object must remain intact in order for the object to still be a shoe? Also, at what point does an object become a sock?

To illustrate my point and get you thinking, I ask you to consider this picture. Is this object a shoe? If so, what is it about the object that makes it a shoe? If not, what is it failing to do that a shoe would do and what changes would have to be made in order for it to be a shoe?

When is a shoe not a shoe?

When is a shoe not a shoe?

Return of the Crazy Designer Shoes

Happy New Year! After the popularity of the last post about crazy designer shoes, we’ve decided to bring you a second instalment – possibly even weirder than the first one! Hold onto your plimsolls, this is gonna get strange…

Designer Shoes

To start things off, a pair of shoes from probably the laziest designer in the world. These are what most people refer to…as feet. They look very much as if the designer simply couldn’t be bothered to finish making them – or even start for that matter! Perhaps I’m being unfair; maybe they were forgotten about until 25 minutes before show time, or the designer ran out of money and couldn’t afford the materials… Whatever the reason for their being, these are not good shoes.

Designer Shoes

In stark contrast to the first shoes, these are probably the most over-planned shoes in existence. In case you can’t see for yourself, they have a CD player built into the sole of the shoe… I don’t actually know whether it works or not, but I fear it may just be a fashion statement similar to wearing headphones attached to nothing around your neck. I’m not saying these are bad shoes, but they are pretty strange.

Designer Shoes

Finally, check out these pinnacles of bizarre – shoes that I refer to in my mind as “The Raptors”! With a heel that would break the ankle of the most bendy of ballerinas, these shoes are also equipped with talon-like claws or spikes that sit in the bridge of the foot, presumably to ensure one does not alter one’s frankly ridiculous pose.

Whatever next?! (This is deceptive because I already know what’s next and it’s mental).

Christmas Designer Shoes for Men

Designer Shoes

We have more seasonal shoes today at the Designer Shoe blog – this time for the guys! Consider these cool Christmas offerings from Adidas, for example; Christmas themed Stan Smith 2 or Superstar 2 shoes, in red and green! Although clearly Christmassy, there’s no doubt these shoes will look the part all year round and, because they’re Adidas, they’ll still be wearable when summertime bring games in the park!

Designer Shoes

If Adidas isn’t really your style, perhaps consider these tartan-style Converse All-Stars instead. A classic shoe with a seasonal spin, these manage to be festive, but without any striking Christmas clichés – a cool and understand style.

Designer Shoes

Of course, it’s not just the adults that can join in the Christmas fun; if the little man in your life wants a piece of the spirit, there are a range of seasonal children’s shoes for them as well! These adorable blue trainers, for example, will keep his feet nice and warm while advertising his love for Christmas and, more importantly at that age, Santa!

Chistmas Designer Shoes for Women

Christmas is nearly here and at the Designer Shoe Blog, this can only mean one thing; Christmas Shoe Time! This is essentially an excuse for the team to whizz around the internet, finding seasonal footwear that we’re sure somebody in your family would love to receive. Even if you’re not thinking of buying designer shoes for Christmas, there are normally some cool shoes to see anyway! Let’s get started with some shoes with the ladies:

Designer Shoes

For the girlfriend, wife, mum, sisters and grannys in your life, consider these stylish, comfortable and super-seasonal Christmas slippers! I know slippers for Christmas seems unoriginal but, let’s be honest, when else do people buy slippers? By the time last year’s Christmas slippers have be worn to tatters, it’s normally summertime and there’s little need for slippers. Then, before you know it it’s nearly Christmas again so nobody buys new ones for themselves, just in case somebody buys them for them for a present!

Designer Shoes

If you think slippers aren’t what the classy lady in your life is after this holiday, perhaps consider buying her some stylish seasonal heels for the Christmas Cocktail party. Although I’d advise against bright red heels with a cartoon Santa (not cool), some like these might make a suave addition to any Christmas outfit…