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Fact #1. Until the late 16th century, footwear rarely meant more than strips of leather or cloth tied or strapped to one's feet. The sandal styles popular in Mediterranean climates like Greece and Italy didn't make a lot of sense in the colder rainy filth of early modern England, France, and Germany.
Fact #2. In the 17th century, footwear evolved to include bows, buckles, and even heels. Later in the century, as war tore through Britain and the rest of Europe, military fashions began to inform the design and popularity of men's footwear. The period of Enlightenment, as well as the French Revolution, popularized a more agrarian aesthetic.
Fact #3. If you're the consummate casual dresser, you aren't prohibited from enjoying the occasional dress shoe. In fact, sporting them with a nice pair of jeans creates one of the smarter casual looks available in modern menswear. It says that you're so casual about being casual that you almost inadvertently make it look nice. Suede shoes, in particular, are tailor-made for dressing up or down as you see fit.
Fact #4. For businessmen, who have themselves in suits on a daily basis, the decision is based as much on color and shape as anything else. Shoes with a more pointed toe, though rounded, are very much more in vogue than the flat-front styles that ran the shoe show back in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Fact #5. There's a sort of intermediary between the more casual look and the smart business attire with a hint of high fashion to it. These are the shoes that fit better in a loafer category than anywhere else. Their number one priorities are comfort and convenience. You don't need a shoe horn to get into them, they require no tying, or strapping, or buckling, and their appearance screams of the easy life.
Fact #1. Until the late 16th century, footwear rarely meant more than strips of leather or cloth tied or strapped to one's feet. The sandal styles popular in Mediterranean climates like Greece and Italy didn't make a lot of sense in the colder rainy filth of early modern England, France, and Germany.
Fact #2. In the 17th century, footwear evolved to include bows, buckles, and even heels. Later in the century, as war tore through Britain and the rest of Europe, military fashions began to inform the design and popularity of men's footwear. The period of Enlightenment, as well as the French Revolution, popularized a more agrarian aesthetic.
Fact #3. If you're the consummate casual dresser, you aren't prohibited from enjoying the occasional dress shoe. In fact, sporting them with a nice pair of jeans creates one of the smarter casual looks available in modern menswear. It says that you're so casual about being casual that you almost inadvertently make it look nice. Suede shoes, in particular, are tailor-made for dressing up or down as you see fit.
Fact #4. For businessmen, who have themselves in suits on a daily basis, the decision is based as much on color and shape as anything else. Shoes with a more pointed toe, though rounded, are very much more in vogue than the flat-front styles that ran the shoe show back in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Fact #5. There's a sort of intermediary between the more casual look and the smart business attire with a hint of high fashion to it. These are the shoes that fit better in a loafer category than anywhere else. Their number one priorities are comfort and convenience. You don't need a shoe horn to get into them, they require no tying, or strapping, or buckling, and their appearance screams of the easy life.
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