So far, this year’s naked dressing trend has given us glimpses – and in some cases glaring flashes – of bellies, bums and boobs. Now, the stripped-back mood has come for a perhaps unlikely locale: toes. “I guess it was time for toes to be ‘fashionable’,” says Helen Persson, a historian and curator of the 2015 V&A exhibition Shoes: Pleasure and Pain. “At different times, different areas of the foot have been deemed alluring, and put on display. From ‘toe cleavage’, and the inside arch of the foot, to the soft round heel in backless shoes, so why not toes themselves?” Toes started titillating fashion around 2019 when hyper-luxury label the Row sent slipper socks, resembling five-denier tights chopped at the ankle, down the catwalk. The translucent gauzy view was through to the whole foot but it was the toes that were in the spotlight. In 2022 came Alaia’s £650 fishnet ballet flats, proffering a subtle peephole effect, and which still have a roving waiting list. Two years, several iterations and hundreds of fast-fashion dupes later, we’re living in an age of all-out foot-digit display, from barely there ballet flats in sheer fabrics to glove-like iterations that punctuate each phalanx. Toe-exposing fashion is a risky and liminal space, the line between sensual elegance and body horror being thin. There are translucent and embellished ballet flats, such as the Marcy shoe from Khaite resembling a mosquito net that has caught dozens of tiny crystals and ten unsuspecting toes. See-through rubberised flats bring to mind holiday swim shoes, while tight-fitting plastic mesh versions can, at the end of the day, leave one’s toes resembling a loin of pork wrapped in butcher’s netting. Despite this, the semi-naked shoe, which draws the eye to the ten digits, continues to allure. Celebrities including Dua Lipa, Zendaya and Anne Hathaway have been pictured with their toes partially exposed and, while the front row used to be dominated by feet clad in four-inch stilettos, during the current fashion month, editors have been grounding themselves in flats that put toes centre stage. There have even been – shock horror – sightings of Vibram’s FiveFingers, a style of shoe usually championed by barefoot advocates. As former Vogue editor Liana Satenstein wrote in her newsletter: “Slipping your foot into Vibram FiveFingers is like the ultimate body high that starts at the digit. It’s a perpetual phalangeal pleasure to have your toes spread-eagle, and there’s a certain heavenly Enya bliss when your feet can rawly grip the earth – or pavement. Essentially, the shoe is like an orgasmic exhale for the foot.” |