Our server costs ~$56 per month to run. Please consider donating or becoming a Patron to help keep the site running. Help us gain new members by following us on Twitter and liking our page on Facebook!
Current time: November 27, 2024, 7:35 pm

Thread Rating:
  • 1 Vote(s) - 5 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
The Shoeaholic thread
#51
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
ElleBelle, I think if I could afford to indulge, I would still stick with the classics. But that is mainly because I don't understand the trends. If I thought they were pretty I might buy them.

Do guys have shoe trends? I don't understand man shoes to be honest. They all look the same, they all cost a fortune it seems but men fret over them. Do you care more about fashion or function?
Reply
#52
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
Anyone interested in the history of this stuff (and its probably just me Wink) should consider the writings of one Cameron Kippen, a podiatrist who has devoted his entire career to researching the interplay of foot, shoe and sexuality. Some history on pointed toes....

Quote: By the High Middle Ages fashion had costume for men and the fashion for long toed shoes called pigaches or poulaines caught on. The fashion lasted over three hundred years before it was eventually legislated against. At first extensions soon became longer and longer until they were so long they made walking almost impossible. Young bucks started to stuff wool and moss in the extensions to keep them erect. Blatantly phallic the long shoe now 24 inches longer than the foot had chain attachments to the knee to prevent tripping. A popular vulgarity was to paint the extensions flesh coloured, allowing them to flap with lifelike mobility. Small hawke bells were sewn to the end of the poulaine to indicate the wearer was a willing partner in sexual frolic. "Footsie, footsie" took on a more meaningful importance during this time and many boring banquets were enhanced with below table shenanigans. Sometimes worn by curling the toes, the poulaine was the forerunner to the codpiece. The origins of the shoes remain clouded but in some places they were referred to as Crackowe shoes. Certainly the fashion was wide spread throughout Europe and their popularity unopposed. Exaggeration is a constant theme of fashion and is used to give maximum impact to a new look and to prolong the life of a dying one. This may account for the eccentricities, which glorified masculine sexuality in a most obvious way. Youths were chastised for standing on the street corners waggling their toes suggestively as the young ladies walked by. The appearance of the poulaine was perhaps less by chance and more to do with and undercurrent belief in the worship of Phallus. This predated Christianity and may have represented a conscious resurfacing of occult practice in the Middle Ages. The Church was aware of the audacity of poulaines and shocked at the overt and ribald obscenity of the habit of wearing them. Sumptuary legislation to stop men from wearing them was introduced because the shoes physically prevented men from praying.


Quote:The aristocrats of Provencal idealized got married for political reasons but upheld two "intimate ceremonies" as a form of courtship. Domnei or woman worship was a custom where the would-be suitor gazed on the partly or fully undressed lady; and Donnoi was when the couple lay naked together sometimes separated by a pillow. The test was the lover had to prove his depth of love by avoiding intercourse. This was sensual, carnal and openly encouraged the delights of kissing and embracing. The sight of a beloved’s nudity and the touching of her body provoked desire. Under these circumstances it would be no stretch of the imagination to work out what gainful employ a 24" long extension on the foot might be put towards. Indeed at a public banquet an average sized adult male with two 24 " long extensions on his feet could keep three women perfectly happy under the table, leaving his hands free to enjoy a health repast.

Those crazy aristocrats.

Can I get a kudos for getting an atheist theme (the church trying to ban pointed toes because they stop you kneeling to pray) into a thread about shoes?Cool Shades.
"Peace is a lie, there is only passion.
Through passion, I gain strength.
Through strength, I gain power.
Through power, I gain victory.
Through victory, my chains are broken."
Sith code
Reply
#53
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
(January 4, 2014 at 1:49 pm)pineapplebunnybounce Wrote: ElleBelle, I think if I could afford to indulge, I would still stick with the classics. But that is mainly because I don't understand the trends. If I thought they were pretty I might buy them.

Do guys have shoe trends? I don't understand man shoes to be honest. They all look the same, they all cost a fortune it seems but men fret over them. Do you care more about fashion or function?
For me, definitely function. I'm more interested in what girls are wearing because feet are definitely a fetish of mine.
Reply
#54
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
Lol that's awesome Jacob. Very interesting.
Reply
#55
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
Lol! I do enjoy a bit of shoe history, we have a shoe museum in my city, people used to wear crazy things. Jacob do you have any special insights on China's foot binding? Some crazy stuff, my great grandma refused to get her feet bound and didn't get to marry a rich guy, ended up doing manual labour for the most of her life.

(feels like we should have a subforum for shoes)
Reply
#56
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
Who knew shoes were so interesting.

We'll, they're always interesting to me. Big Grin
Reply
#57
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
Ah, footbinding. Yes indeed. As you may suspect its entirely sexual. There are three elements. One is that the lotus foot, placed together, forms an analogue of a ladies hoo hoo, and men were thought to use it for the traditional purpose (foot fetishes are nothing new). The second is somewhat more esoteric. Crippling the feet in that way means the feet are inherently unstable and painful to walk on. The muscle tensions required to walk like that involve massive tensions through all the extrinsic stabilisers right up to the pelvic floor. In short, a lady with bound feet will have a very tight vagina. Just for fun, try flexing your big toe so you walk on the tip of your toe and your heels, and notice what the muscles around your butt and pelvis do. Now imagine what those muscles would be like if you walked like that ALL the time. Right? Right. Finally, a woman with crippled feet is not able to do any kind of manual labour. As such it was an indication that one did not expect to have to work, a mark of social prestige.
"Peace is a lie, there is only passion.
Through passion, I gain strength.
Through strength, I gain power.
Through power, I gain victory.
Through victory, my chains are broken."
Sith code
Reply
#58
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
(January 4, 2014 at 2:04 pm)Jacob(smooth) Wrote: Ah, footbinding. Yes indeed. As you may suspect its entirely sexual. There are three elements. One is that the lotus foot, placed together, forms an analogue of a ladies hoo hoo, and men were thought to use it for the traditional purpose (foot fetishes are nothing new). The second is somewhat more esoteric. Crippling the feet in that way means the feet are inherently unstable and painful to walk on. The muscle tensions required to walk like that involve massive tensions through all the extrinsic stabilisers right up to the pelvic floor. In short, a lady with bound feet will have a very tight vagina. Just for fun, try flexing your big toe so you walk on the tip of your toe and your heels, and notice what the muscles around your butt and pelvis do. Now imagine what those muscles would be like if you walked like that ALL the time. Right? Right. Finally, a woman with crippled feet is not able to do any kind of manual labour. As such it was an indication that one did not expect to have to work, a mark of social prestige.

So if I had just bound my feet, I wouldn't have to work and a man would take care of me? Wish I would have known about that!
Reply
#59
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
(January 4, 2014 at 1:49 pm)pineapplebunnybounce Wrote: ElleBelle, I think if I could afford to indulge, I would still stick with the classics. But that is mainly because I don't understand the trends. If I thought they were pretty I might buy them.

Do guys have shoe trends? I don't understand man shoes to be honest. They all look the same, they all cost a fortune it seems but men fret over them. Do you care more about fashion or function?

I used to believe in function. I wore 9 inch magnums (insanely comfortable service type boot) all year around. However more recently I have discovered how good it feels to wear something impractical and now my favourite footwear are my cowboy boots (very pointed).
"Peace is a lie, there is only passion.
Through passion, I gain strength.
Through strength, I gain power.
Through power, I gain victory.
Through victory, my chains are broken."
Sith code
Reply
#60
RE: The Shoeaholic thread
(January 4, 2014 at 2:06 pm)Jacob(smooth) Wrote:
(January 4, 2014 at 1:49 pm)pineapplebunnybounce Wrote: ElleBelle, I think if I could afford to indulge, I would still stick with the classics. But that is mainly because I don't understand the trends. If I thought they were pretty I might buy them.

Do guys have shoe trends? I don't understand man shoes to be honest. They all look the same, they all cost a fortune it seems but men fret over them. Do you care more about fashion or function?

I used to believe in function. I wore 9 inch magnums (insanely comfortable service type boot) all year around. However more recently I have discovered how good it feels to wear something impractical and now my favourite footwear are my cowboy boots (very pointed).

Exactly. When your outfit looks awesome, you don't care about how they make your feet feel as much. Wink
Reply



Possibly Related Threads...
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Link us to your intro thread, first post and/or first thread Whateverist 35 5274 October 21, 2018 at 8:14 pm
Last Post: Mystic



Users browsing this thread: 3 Guest(s)