Platform shoes are , , or sandals with a thick sole, usually in the range of . Platform shoes may also be high heels, in which case the heel is raised significantly higher than the ball of the foot. Extreme heights, of both the sole and heel, can be found in fetish footwear such as ballet boots, where the sole may be up to high and the heels up to or more. The sole of a platform shoe can have a continuous uniform thickness, have a wedge, a separate block or a Stiletto heel heel. Raising the ankle increases the risk of a sprained ankle.
By 1936, Salvatore Ferragamo was producing a variety of platforms of multiple heights and extensive ornamentation, including platforms paved in mirror-shiny metallic gold tiles. Some of his platforms featured soles that allowed the footbed to bend more naturally with each step because they were constructed of two separate blocks of wood or cork, one attached under the ball of the foot and one attached immediately behind that moved back from the other as the foot flexed while walking.
In the summer of 1937, high, cork-soled platform shoes became popular at European resorts and would influence footwear for the next few years. In the final two years of the 1930s, an array of platform shoe styles proliferated and could be seen in fashion magazines and popular periodicals: platform sandals, platform clogs, high platforms, low platforms, cut-out platforms, platforms with elevated heels, platforms where the foot sits flat, wooden platforms, platforms with separate heels, platforms with continuous wedge heels (a new invention),
In 1938, The Rainbow was a platform sandal designed by famous shoe designer Salvatore Ferragamo. “The Rainbow” was created and was the first instance of the platform shoe returning in modern days in the West. The platform sandal was designed for Judy Garland, an American singer, actress, and vaudevillian. This shoe was a tribute to Judy Garland's signature song “Over the Rainbow” performed in the Wizard of Oz in 1939. The shoe was crafted using uniquely shaped slabs of cork that were covered in suede to build up the wedge and gold kidskin was used for the straps. His creation was a result of experimentations with new materials because of wartime rationing during World War II. Traditionally heels were built up with leather, but because of the rationing of leather, he experimented with wood and cork DeMello, M. (2009). Feet and footwear: A cultural encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press/ABC-CLIO. The colors and design of this shoe still resemble modern shoe standards today.
Platform shoes continued to grow in popularity into the 1940s, their cork and wood soles conforming to World War II material restrictions and the wartime need for practicality.
In the 1940s, platforms were designed with a high arch, but as exemplified here, they originated with the heel elevated only slightly above the toes. The platform brings a heavy looking foundation to the wearer that is in direct polarity to the stiletto heel. With its reconfiguration of the arch and structure of attenuated insubstantiality, the high heel suggests the anti-gravitational effect of the dancer en pointe. On the contrary, the platform displays weightiness more like the flat steps of modern dance.
Platform shoes remained popular after the end of World War II, but Christian Dior's transformative 1947 "Corolle" collection introduced a different fashion silhouette that did not include high platform shoes, and it was this look that would dominate the 1950s.
In the 1950s, platform shoes were not favored in the same way that they used to be. Fashion returned to the more elegantly shaped shoe.
Platform shoes peaked in designer endorsement and public popularity in the early 1970s and were available in a myriad of styles: clogs, sandals, pumps, oxfords, moccasins, espadrilles, slides, thongs, boots, etc, with platforms ranging in height from very low to many inches high. Heels could lie even with the ball of the foot (flat) or be elevated above the platform sole by up to four inches.
Occasionally seen during the early 1970s peak in interest in platform shoes was a playful 1940s-revival look, seen most famously in Yves Saint Laurent's fall 1970 and spring '71 collections, which included forties-looking platform wedge sandals with forties-style high turbans and shoulder pads. Forties platform shoes by this point were remembered as consisting of ankle straps, peep toes, and often bows on the vamp, though in reality 1940s platform shoes had been very diverse in style and shape, with many presaging popular styles of the 1970s. Other high fashion designers also showed this caricatured 1940s look occasionally during the early seventies, as did more youth-oriented clothiers like Bus Stop out of the UK.
A new addition that did not exist during the 1940s was platforms for men. During the early 1970s, men began wearing platform shoes and high, chunky heels in bold colors and materials, the larger shoes augmenting the silhouette of the wide, flared trouser hems that were the norm at the time. As with women, platforms worn under flared trousers gave an impression of length to the leg and added height.
While the wider heels of early seventies platform shoes were more stable than the stiletto-heeled pumps of the 1950s, their inflexible soles and great height resulted in numerous cases of falls and injuries, with occasional newspaper articles quoting podiatrists
The high fashion world began to deemphasize platform shoes around 1973 but continued to include some platforms in their offerings through the mid-seventies, particularly platform espadrilles. Many of the popular high-heeled, thin-strapped sandals of the middle of the decade featured low platform soles as well, and the public continued to buy wood-soled and crepe-soled platforms with wedge heels, now increasingly in earthtones and less flashy than some early seventies models. Popular platform brand names of the mid-seventies included Cherokee, Yoyo, and Famolare. Famolares were set on a crepe sole molded into springy wave shapes at the bottom, the waves emphasized by topographic-looking contour lines etched into the sides. These were enormously popular, available in sandal, oxford, and boot styles. Yoyos were one of a few styles that featured a hole cut into the wedge heel, a design detail also seen in the 1940s.
Platform shoes continued through to 1976 in Europe and Britain, when they suddenly went out of fashion. The fad lasted even further in the US, lasting until as late as the early 1980s. At the beginning of the fad, they were worn primarily by young women in their teens and twenties, and occasionally by younger girls, older women, and (particularly during the disco era) by young men. Platform shoes were considered the "party shoe." Disco-goers used their shoes to bring attention to themselves on the dance floor. 70s platform shoes were presented in dramatic and showy ways such as with glitter or tiny lights.
In 1972, at 219 Bowery in Manhattan, Carole Bascetta developed a special mold for making platform shoes and was successful in selling custom-made shoes to people such as David Bowie, David Johansen of the New York Dolls, and several other punk artists. Although platform shoes did provide added height without the discomfort of spike heels, they seem to have been worn primarily for the sake of attracting attention. Many glam rock musicians wore platform shoes as part of their act. Bowie, an icon of glam rock and androgynous fashion in the 1970s, famously wore platform shoes while performing as his alter ego Ziggy Stardust.
While a wide variety of styles were popular during this period, including boots, espadrilles, oxford shoe, sneakers, and sandals of all description, with soles made of wood, cork, or synthetic materials, the most popular style of the late 1960s and early 1970s was a simple quarter-strap sandal with tan domestic buffalo-hide straps, on a beige suede-wrapped cork wedge-heel platform sole. These were originally introduced under the brand name Kork-Ease but the extreme popularity supported many imitators. Remarkably, there was very little variation in style, and most of that variation was limited to differences in height.
During the late seventies, platform shoes went decisively out of style in the high-fashion world, most clearly with the fall 1978 collections that introduced what would become 1980s-style shoulder pads and suits. Unlike during the smaller 1940s revival of the early seventies, the forties-inspired silhouette of these 1978-through-1980s styles did not include platform shoes but flat soles, tapered toes, and high, narrow heels.
The Punk fashion styles that arose in 1976 and '77, particularly in the UK, also rejected the dominant styles of the 1970s like platform shoes, a trend that would continue during the 1980s.
An exception to this move away from platforms in the late seventies were the Candie's slides popular in the US during late 1978. Made by El Greco, these were single-strap mules with a molded sole and heel that included a platform of about an inch, worn with just-introduced designer jeans, their cigarette legs rolled up to the ankle to show off the shoes.
Another exception to this retreat from platforms was seen in one of the myriad revival subcultures that came in the wake of punk in the late seventies. Male adherents of a UK 1950s-revival subculture known as Teddy Boys or rockabilly revivalists sometimes wore a shoe style from the early fifties referred to as due to their thick crepe sole, now often with the sole exaggerated and the uppers in punk-influenced blacks with aggressive-looking hardware trim.
In mainstream fashion, platform shoes were not in style during the 1980s, since much of the fashion of the 1980s was a rejection of the well known styles of the 1970s, particularly the early seventies when platform shoes had been at their peak of popularity. The fashion-conscious in the eighties rejected such early seventies trends as big sideburns, wide ties, wide lapels, bell-bottom pants, and platform shoes, in some cases shaving off sideburns entirely, even eating up into the side hairline, and in all cases wearing soles that were completey flat, for men and women, the most clear case of this being the popularity of completely flat, thin-soled, nearly heel-less jazz oxfords in the early years of the decade.
An exception to all of this was occasionally seen in the proliferating revival subcultures of the late seventies and early eighties, much of it coming out of the UK. 1950s-revival rockabilly aficionados or Teddy Boys occasionally wore a 50s-revival shoe style with a thick crepe sole called a brothel creeper, now usually influenced by Punk fashion and cartoonishly exaggerated with a very thick sole, lots of shiny hardware, and bright colors against a black background. These were also occasionally worn by non-subculture trendy types during the eighties. The hard rock music that coalesced in the early 1970s and remained popular into the 1980s got influenced by punk rock in the late seventies and was declared to be in revival beginning in 1979, when a few such groups turned to the sound's early 70s roots and donned Kiss-style platform boots, the best known being early 80s Mötley Crüe and Wrathchild. This was all kind of subcultural, though, not really seen among the mainstream populace, who continued to view the seventies as laughably out of style.
In the mid-eighties, a small group of avant-gardists located in London began to play with ideas of bad taste by reviving styles from the early seventies, including platform shoes, with club denizens like Leigh Bowery and Michael Clark wearing repurposed early-seventies platforms and shoe designer Patrick Cox outfitting the collections of avant-garde designers like John Galliano in occasional platformed footwear. BodyMap and Vivienne Westwood showed them as well, as did a few avant-garde designers in Paris like Adeline Andre. In line with the silhouettes of the eighties, many of these platforms were tapered rather than being blocky or flared as in the early seventies.
The United Kingdom (and European) experience of platform shoes was somewhat different from that of the United States. The long, pointed shoes of the early 2000s, giving an elongated look to the foot, have been more popular in the US than in the UK.
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