Everyone has that one fashion item that excites them more than any other. Beautifully crafted handbags are a common favorite, as are wool coats and expertly tailored dresses. For me, it’s shoes — handmade, hand-stitched, buttery-soft shoes. And after spending far too much time in quarantine perusing this season’s selection of fine footwear, it’s clear to me that the ballet flat has an updated look.
I first caught wind of the shoe’s makeover via an Instagram post by NYC-based brand Khaite’s creative director Catherine Holstein. Designed for the brand’s pre-fall ‘20 collection, the Ashland Ballet Flat came up higher on the top than a regular ballet flat, included a squared-off toe, and was topped with a delicate string bow. I immediately wanted a pair. And given that the style in both white and black are almost completely sold-out — despite costing $660 — I wasn’t the only one.
With a newfound love for the silhouette, I started spotting ballet flats with a high throat everywhere. I found myself yearning to buy The Row’s mesh slippers and Loewe’s crystal-embellished flats; I imagined walking into Mansur Gavriel’s millennial pink store in SoHo and leaving with a pair of Dream Ballerinas. Unlike the classic ballerina flats, this year’s selection is unexpected, with materials like mesh and more angular silhouettes.
For someone like myself, whose collection of footwear consists of loafers and heeled sandals in the summer and a very tall pair of black boots in the winter, craving the comfort of a ballet flat felt almost wrong. Alas, when shoes as good as these come along — especially given how little there is to get excited about these days — you embrace them with open arms.
See for yourself by shopping the ballet flats ahead.
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