Golo Footwear

Golo Footwear established in 1915 Adolf Heilbrunn from Germany, Golo initially designed and manufactured slippers in Dunmore, Pennsylvania. The company was known for experimenting with materials not traditionally used in footwear, such as cork, stretch fabrics, Gore-Tex for rainboots,[1] and clear lucite sandal wedges.[2] [3] Golo boot and shoe designs graced the covers and pages of every fashion magazine from 1950 through the 1980s. The footwear was photographed by some of the most admired photographers in the fashion industry, including Helmut Newton,[4] Bert Stern,[5] Hiro,[6] and Richard Avedon.[7]

There are presently 22 Golo boots, shoes, and sandals in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, including an over-the-knee boot made of different-colored patent leather zip-on layers,[8] stretch patent leather boots designed for Jacques Tiffeau in 1967, and the iconic denim platform boots designed by Leila Larmon and Stephen Bruce.[9]

References

  1. Footwear News, May 26, 2003
  2. "Shoes walk tall this spring". Evelyn Livingstone; Chicago Tribune; Jan 14, 1977 known for the famed go-go boot worn by Barbra Streisand in the 1960s, the boot was heralded for its new and innovating design, in part by being "bigger than an ordinary shoe, but smaller than a regular boot - as if a true boot had been lopped off before it grew to full height".
  3. Nastalgia in Vogue. Eva MacSweeney. Rizzoli 2011. ISBN 9780847836819
  4. Vogue. May 1964. pg. 124
  5. Vogue, August 15, 1968. pg 55
  6. Harper's Bazaar, February 1966 Cover
  7. Vogue. April 1, 1967 pg 131
  8. "Boots". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  9. Fashion: the twentieth century. François Baudot. Universe, 2006. ISBN 0789313979, 9780789313973

External links

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