Footwear
Footwear consists of garments worn on the feet, for fashion, protection against the environment, and adornment. Poor people in impoverished or third world groups often do not wear footwear. Religious requirements may prohibit footwear (for example, some temples).
Socks and other hosiery are usually worn between the feet and the footwear, less often with sandals and flip flops (thongs). Footwear is sometimes associated with fetishism, particularly in some fashions in shoes and boots.
People who practice the profession of shoemaking are shoemakers, cobblers or cordwainers.
The oldest known footwear was discovered in Fort Rock Cave in the U.S. state of Oregon; radiocarbon dating of these sandals woven from sagebrush bark indicates an age of least 10,000 years.[1]
Materials
Components
- Adhesives
- Air cushion
- Buckle
- Counterfort
- Eyelet
- Heel
- Hook
- Insole
- Laces
- Reinforcement tape
- Sole
- Steel shank
- Tack
- Toe puff
- Tread
- Welt
- paramore shoes
Types
- Boots
- Shoes
- Athletic shoes (also known as trainers or sneakers)
- Brothel creepers
- Diabetic shoes
- Espadrilles
- Galoshes
- Pumps/Court shoes
- Kitten heels
- Lace-up shoes
- High-Tops
- Loafers
- Mary Janes
- Moccasins
- Monks
- Mules
- Platform shoes
- School shoes
- MBTshoes
- Tap shoes
- Sandals
- "Mandals"
- Flip flops (thongs)
- Slide
- Chaco
- Indoor footwear
- Specific footwear
- Ballet shoes
- High-heeled footwear
- Climbing shoes
- Clogs
- Foot thong
- MBT boots
- Sabaton
- Safety footwear
- Ski boots
- Snowshoes
- Surgical shoe
- Pointe shoes
- Swimfins (flippers)
- Traditional footwear
- Socks
- Trainer/Sneaker/Ankle socks
- Diabetic sock
See also
References
- ^ Robbins, William G. (2005). Oregon: This Storied Land. Oregon Historical Society Press. ISBN 0987595-286-0.
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