Thursday, 21 September 2017

Shoe Elevation Can Level The Playing Field

By Eric Moore


Vertically challenged individuals have been looking up to their peers for far too long. Even as adults, a man who measures less than 5' 6" is often harassed and teased by other men, and all-too-often rejected by women; even when the woman is of equal or lesser height than he. Ah, but now they can fool their friends and stand tall with cleverly made shoe elevation.

Conveniently, the platform heel has come back in fashion, and styles ranging from elevated Konverse to high-heeled, raised combat boots for the ladies. Kids love towering over their classmates in the hallway, stomping their way from locker to lab test. However, the obviousness of platforms has given way to a method of manufacturing footwear which hides the fact.

In the fashion world of women, high heels have returned higher, sturdier, and better. Women of normal height often find they are as tall as most men when wearing a good pair of heels. In this way a woman might seem almost larger than life, and this allows her to feel more confident when working alongside men in the corporate world.

This new style involves the creation of an elevation insole that rises from the inside. The shoes themselves are sewn in a way that they fit the wearer properly around the ankle, yet still conceal the fact that the person is pressed taller. These days they can be leather penny-loafers or fitness sneakers; all styles fitting snugly and making the wearer taller than they have ever experienced.

When the pair is manufactured with the elevated interior concealed within its engineering, there is a greater height one can reach. In fact, they are consistently created to grant the wearer from 7 to 10 centimeters of towering advantage. This means the man or woman who dons them will be anywhere from two to four whole inches taller than they were.

Inserts have been used by short men for many years for the same purpose, but less effectively, as well as less expensively. Unless they were purchased at a size too big, the inserts take up a great deal of room within. This can cause the toes to be cramped, and the upper to rest too far below the ankles, resulting in the pair constantly slipping off the heel.

Easily attached lifts which connect to the bottom of a pair of regular shoes can be found for those who are on a budget. They are an excellent option because they do not cause the shoes to fit awkwardly and there is no problematic slippage off the heel. However, such attachments are typically best for shoes which are to be worn inside, and do not endure regular wear and tear.

Men and women who have been in accidents often have legs which are different lengths. Special ordered pairs can be created that will accommodate the difference in leg lengths while making the shoes appear to be identical. Now even one suffering a birth injury or motorcycle accident can walk without a limp in shoes that hide their infirmity from the world.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment