Early 1800s Straight Sole Lace-up Kid Leather Shoes // - Etsy Canada
Stepping Out: A Pair of 1820's Ladies' Half Boots | Material Matters
Antique Ad Card - LATE 1800s - W F MOODY, BOOTS SHOES - Auburn ME | eBay
Early Victorian Slippers (to Get Excited About) – American Duchess Blog
Children's Shoes · Historic Textile and Costume Collection
Incredible 1800s Embroidered Silk Chinese Slippers - Etsy Canada
Costume Society UK on Twitter: "In the late 1800s flat slippers, hand embroidered in Berlin Wool work, were often made for male family members or friends. Shown here, a slipper front,partly worked,
Shoe - Wikipedia
shoes Straw slippers with red silk lining and bows, Italy, mid 1800s.Straw slippers with red silk lining and bows, Italy, mid 1800s pintrest | The Straw Shop
Pin on Shoes
Evening slippers. Culture: British. Designer: Vandervell. Date: 1815-20. Realized in an interesting self-patterned silk with attractive contrasting details, these slippers illustrate the transition away from the very pointed toe and development toward
Shoes and sacrifice: Exhibition at the Victoria & Albert Museum explores footwear fashion - Alain.R.Truong
Pair of Shoes | The Walters Art Museum
Teensy-Weensy, Itty-Bitty Shoes | The National Endowment for the Humanities
Hing Sheng Boot and Shoe Maker | Evening slippers | probably American | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fashionable Shoes of the 18th and 19th Centuries and How They Were Made | Jane Austen's World
Early Victorian Slippers (to Get Excited About) – American Duchess Blog
Men's patent leather shoes, early 1800s | Mens patent leather shoes, Historical shoes, Handmade shoes
File:Woman's shoes for bound feet, China, Qing dynasty, mid 1800s AD, silk, paper - Textile Museum, George Washington University - DSC09972.JPG - Wikimedia Commons
Leather Shoes/Slippers | Smithsonian Institution
Pin on -1800's-
Teensy-Weensy, Itty-Bitty Shoes | The National Endowment for the Humanities
English Historical Fiction Authors: LADIES' SLIPPERS AND HALF-BOOTS IN THE REGENCY ERA
Evening slippers | probably American | The Metropolitan Museum of Art