Flip-Flops, Footwear Of Pharoahs
A 'Fad' So
Old It'll Make Your Toes Curl
NEW YORK, Aug. 13,
2006
(CBS) For many Americans this summer, the next best thing to
sinking one's toes into the sand is sliding them between the straps of a pair
of flip-flops. Charles Osgood noted the flip-flop frenzy on CBS News'
Sunday Morning.
Flips-flops are being seen everywhere this summer, from city sidewalks to the
fashion runway. But Tim Gunn, style guru of the hit television show
"Project Runway" and Chair of Fashion at New York's
Parsons, The New School for Design, says if you think the current flip-flop
frenzy is just a fad, he has some news that may make your toes curl.
"I have to say, I think they're much more than a trend," Gunn says,
"and I think that they are so fully embedded into the culture that they're
not going anywhere, and if anything, the number of wearers will expand. Once
one experiences a certain degree of comfort, one doesn't want to go back to
anything that's binding or constraining."
In fact, history buffs take note: the flip-flop is one of the first types of
footwear known to man. The pharaohs wore them. So did the ancient Indians,
Assyrians, Romans, Greeks and Japanese.
Only in the 20th century, with the cheap mass production of rubber, did
flip-flops really become the world's favorite shoe, if only because people
couldn't afford anything else.
Valerie Steele, director of the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology
in New York City, notes that "after World War II, as billions of
people were moving from being barefoot to wearing shoes, this is the basic type
of shoe they wore in any sort of warm continent."
She finds it "fascinating that something so ancient could be considered,
in a way, the most popular form of footwear today, in the 21st century. Its
very simplicity seems to make it extremely modern."
But even Steele was taken aback the first time she saw people wearing
flip-flops on city streets. They seemed, she says, "so
inappropriate."
If flip-flops once seemed inappropriate for urban streets, they've certainly
come a long way.
Today, women's flip-flops come in dazzling colors with dizzying price tags. A
pair by designer Deborah Evans, hand-embroidered with Swarovski crystals, costs
$175. Dolce and Gabanna has a fancy pair for $850. A pair of Havaianas
embellished with thousands of gold feathers and more than 400 diamonds costs
$17,000.
At that price, maybe they should at least be called "sandals." Gunn
suggests that "once it becomes embellished and dressed up, people start to
refer to it as a sandal. So they take it out of the flip-flop genre." That
may be hopeless, he says: "Once a flip-flop, always a flip-flop."
In any case, cheers to the humble flip flop, the very sole of good taste for
almost any occasion.
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Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or
redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.