Edwardian shoes for women very much depended on the shape of the woman’s foot. Ladies with wide feet were not expected to wear pointed toed shoes. Lades with more dainty feet could wear Edwardian shoes in slipper form. Just like any other period in fashion, Edwardian shoes were expected to match a woman’s ensemble and do justice to her class status. The norm of the day was pointed boots, heels or slippers, often made of leather or suede and sometimes decorated with animal furs for the winter. Pointed toes especially complemented women who skirts receded just above the feet. It became practical for a lady to keep her skirt clean from the dirty floors while sporting the latest fashionable Edwardian shoes.
Edwardian shoes that were pointed in nature came to define fashion for both the Edwardian and Victorian eras. As skirts receded, the feet were shown which led to more fashionable foot wear. A lady could no longer get away with wearing ugly shoes since most of the time her skirt and layers covered her feet, but with the shorter skirts came the need for comfortable and fashionable Edwardian shoes. The signature pointed toed boot of the Edwardian shoes era came to define the lady of that time period. They were often laced and just like heels were very cumbersome to walk in. However, ladies chose to suffer in the name of fashion when it came to sporting the latest in Edwardian shoes. Think of it as wearing heels today, having your toes crunched and your heels propped upward and the soles of your feet sloping downward that placed more pressure on your toes and you could get a basic sense of how many Edwardian women’s feet hurt at the end of the day.
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