Wow...look at these shoes...I don't think I could wear any of these at the office (besides the hefty price too).
"From Fairway to Runway" by David Colman, 2 May 2012.
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2012/05/03/fashion/20120503-TRADINGUP.html?ref=fashion
"In some fashion quarters, enthusiasm for old-school heritage style is fading like embers. But elsewhere, it is raging out of control, with evermore vivid hues and ornate detail. One need only glance down, at the recent spate of colorized bucks and saddle shoes. Or take a gander at the even more surprising reappearance of an over-the-vamp, over-the-top shoe detail one might have thought was gone forever: the kiltie.
Like some soap-opera character declared dead in a South American plane crash, only to be found alive years later (and looking suspiciously like a completely different actor), the charmingly oddball golf-shoe detail that is the kiltie is back, in a totally different incarnation. Once an inescapable facet of 1950s country clubs, a kiltie is a long fringed tongue of leather that attaches to a golf shoes inside tongue and folds over the laces.
But just as those golf shoes, with their treacherous metal spikes, were verboten inside the clubhouse, the kiltie itself almost never appeared other than on golf shoes. The style, which was first spotted on George V in 1905, was widely adopted in the 20s, then faded out in the 70s. Today a kiltie is as likely to be found on a golf shoe as those old metal spikes are.
So the comeback was not on the links but the runways. Kilties have been spotted here and there for a couple of seasons, a favorite (in a black-and-white spectator style) of Thom Browne, but this spring several labels have come out with them. There is quite a range, too, from subtle styles in black and brown from Ralph Lauren, Mark McNairy, Billy Reid and Churchs English Shoes to far more conspicuous color combinations. Prada made a handful with eye-popping accents.
I am wearing a pair even as we speak, said Billy Reid, on the phone at home in Florence, Ala. I love how it reminds me of a country club, and highballs and whiskey sours. When I was young, my summer job was bartender and lifeguard at a country club, so I saw a lot of these.
Mr. Reid said he was surprised at how well they had sold.
Theres a lot of novelty happening in shoes, he said. Whether its colored leather, fabric, hardware or soles, that is what guys seem to be interested in. What I like about the kiltie at least the way I did it, in this beat-up horsehide is that its good for the guy who might want to buy a colorful shoe but doesnt want to go that far.
He pointed out that they go well with a seersucker suit and also look great with jeans or khakis, adding a dandified note to lazy summer dressing. As preposterous as it may sound, the old-fashioned propriety and slightly silly elegance of the kiltie sends a message: that a man should both take, and not take, style too seriously.
Far better to let your shoes explain that than you".
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/03/f...-return-off-the-fairway.html?_r=1&ref=fashion
"It isn't the mountains ahead to climb that wears you out; it's the pebble in your shoe". Muhammad Ali
"From Fairway to Runway" by David Colman, 2 May 2012.
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2012/05/03/fashion/20120503-TRADINGUP.html?ref=fashion
"In some fashion quarters, enthusiasm for old-school heritage style is fading like embers. But elsewhere, it is raging out of control, with evermore vivid hues and ornate detail. One need only glance down, at the recent spate of colorized bucks and saddle shoes. Or take a gander at the even more surprising reappearance of an over-the-vamp, over-the-top shoe detail one might have thought was gone forever: the kiltie.
Like some soap-opera character declared dead in a South American plane crash, only to be found alive years later (and looking suspiciously like a completely different actor), the charmingly oddball golf-shoe detail that is the kiltie is back, in a totally different incarnation. Once an inescapable facet of 1950s country clubs, a kiltie is a long fringed tongue of leather that attaches to a golf shoes inside tongue and folds over the laces.
But just as those golf shoes, with their treacherous metal spikes, were verboten inside the clubhouse, the kiltie itself almost never appeared other than on golf shoes. The style, which was first spotted on George V in 1905, was widely adopted in the 20s, then faded out in the 70s. Today a kiltie is as likely to be found on a golf shoe as those old metal spikes are.
So the comeback was not on the links but the runways. Kilties have been spotted here and there for a couple of seasons, a favorite (in a black-and-white spectator style) of Thom Browne, but this spring several labels have come out with them. There is quite a range, too, from subtle styles in black and brown from Ralph Lauren, Mark McNairy, Billy Reid and Churchs English Shoes to far more conspicuous color combinations. Prada made a handful with eye-popping accents.
I am wearing a pair even as we speak, said Billy Reid, on the phone at home in Florence, Ala. I love how it reminds me of a country club, and highballs and whiskey sours. When I was young, my summer job was bartender and lifeguard at a country club, so I saw a lot of these.
Mr. Reid said he was surprised at how well they had sold.
Theres a lot of novelty happening in shoes, he said. Whether its colored leather, fabric, hardware or soles, that is what guys seem to be interested in. What I like about the kiltie at least the way I did it, in this beat-up horsehide is that its good for the guy who might want to buy a colorful shoe but doesnt want to go that far.
He pointed out that they go well with a seersucker suit and also look great with jeans or khakis, adding a dandified note to lazy summer dressing. As preposterous as it may sound, the old-fashioned propriety and slightly silly elegance of the kiltie sends a message: that a man should both take, and not take, style too seriously.
Far better to let your shoes explain that than you".
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/03/f...-return-off-the-fairway.html?_r=1&ref=fashion
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