Whether you’re looking for a refined shoe to add to your rotation or an unexpected silhouette to give your outfit a bit of ...
Just decades ago there were thousands. Now only about 30 Dutch clog-makers remain, fighting to save a dying craft with the wooden shoes more often found today as fridge-magnets rather than footwear.
Wooden shoes have become a Dutch cliché—a symbol of the low-lying Netherlands’ past. Even their name, klompen (yes, the singular is klomp), has a fun and oh-so-Dutch ring to it. But it turns out that ...
They were the unexpected fashion hit of last season and it seems clogs aren’t going away. Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Dolce & Gabbana and Miu Miu have all featured this funky footwear on their spring ...
Wooden shoes, wouldn't listen. Had Dutch farmers opted for some sensible footwear instead of the beloved 'klompen' almost two centuries ago, perhaps they wouldn't have suffered rare bone lesions in ...
One of the Netherlands last remaining clog makers is struggling to find a successor. Bertus Roesink is 77 and his family has been making clogs for over a century. But as the Dutch abandon their ...
A buzz around clogs has been slowly rebuilding for a few years. In 2018, Dior sent its models down the runway in studded versions; in 2019, Molly Goddard and Miu Miu did the same and last year, every ...
Just decades ago there were thousands. Now only about 30 Dutch clog-makers remain, fighting to save a dying craft with the wooden shoes more often found today as fridge-magnets rather than footwear.
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