Thanks to everyone who voted in the poll to help determine what our next shoe release is.

I'm happy to announce that the winner, by a landslide, is Gettysburg!

American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog

We'll be preparing to release these sweet little boots in a few weeks. In the meantime, here are some original side-lacing, foxed boots:

American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
Museum of London, 1840s
American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
History Up Close, 1850-55
American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
Bata Shoe Museum - click through for a podcast, "How Victorian Women Protected Their Modesty"
American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
Shoe-Icons, 1830-40 - This is Gettysburg's closest ancestor.
American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
Oakland Museum of California, c. 1860
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Vintage Textile, c. 1830
American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog
The Met, 1840s
Side-lacing boots, or "gaiters," were fashionable from the 1830s to the 1860s. During this time, women's footwear changed very little, and only minor shifts in the squareness of toes or the height of the top of bootees occurred.

Side-lacing boots like these, and "Gettysburg," were meant for outdoor use. The leather applications on the toes and often heels were known as "foxing," and protected textile shoes from wear - these bits also look extra chic, I think. :-) Boots of this shape were also made in satin, but were confined to indoor use.

Most ladies' shoes of this period had a very short life - they were thin, with thin soles, and often were often made by the lady who wore them. "Every Lady Her Own Shoemaker," published in 1856, provided instructions and patterns on how to make a variety of everyday footwear with minimal tools and experience. You can get your own little copy from Originals by Kay.

By the mid 1860s, gaiter boots had small heels, and were then eventually replaced by front-lacing and side-buttoning styles.

"Gettysburg" boots follow the lines of these square-toed, side-lacing gaiter boots as closely as possible, though we did compromise in adding a bit more width to the sole through the arch of the foot, where originals would be as narrow as 2 inches or even less. We've removed the toe boxes and followed the same seam lines, in an effort to create the perfect Victorian booties for Dickens Fair, Civil War, and other 1830s-60s events.

American Duchess Historic Shoes Blog



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Tagged: Shoes Victorian