
Rococo · 1720s · British
Production
handmade
Material
silk brocade
Culture
British
Influences
French court fashion · Louis XV heel style
These mid-18th century court shoes feature a distinctive pointed toe and curved Louis heel characteristic of Rococo footwear. The sage green silk brocade displays an elaborate floral pattern with coral pink roses, blue flowers, and foliage woven throughout. The shoes have a low-cut vamp with a single strap closure secured by a fabric-covered button. The heel measures approximately two inches and curves inward in the typical manner of the period. Brown leather trim edges the shoe opening and reinforces stress points. The construction shows fine hand-stitching and the brocade pattern continues seamlessly across the shoe's surface, indicating skilled craftsmanship typical of expensive court footwear of the Rococo era.
These pieces reveal how 18th-century British fashion borrowed wholesale from French court aesthetics, translating Versailles luxury into domestic interpretations. The shoe's sage silk brocade blooms with the same delicate florals that dance across the gown's embroidered sleeves—both deploying nature motifs as coded signals of refinement and leisure.
These two pieces reveal how French Rococo taste colonized European courts through a shared vocabulary of silk luxury and botanical ornament. The Spanish skirt panel's dark velvet carries the same densely worked floral motifs that bloom across the British shoe's sage brocade—both speaking the international language of court refinement where flowers weren't just decoration but coded signals of sophistication.
These two pieces reveal how the Rococo obsession with naturalistic ornament created a visual language that crossed every boundary of class and function. The sage brocade shoes, with their scattered blooms dancing across silk, and the linen lappet cap with its delicate vine tracery, both channel the same decorative DNA — that mid-18th-century mania for turning the human body into a walking garden.


These pieces reveal how 18th-century British fashion borrowed wholesale from French court aesthetics, translating Versailles luxury into domestic interpretations. The shoe's sage silk brocade blooms with the same delicate florals that dance across the gown's embroidered sleeves—both deploying nature motifs as coded signals of refinement and leisure.
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These two pieces reveal how French Rococo taste colonized European courts through a shared vocabulary of silk luxury and botanical ornament. The Spanish skirt panel's dark velvet carries the same densely worked floral motifs that bloom across the British shoe's sage brocade—both speaking the international language of court refinement where flowers weren't just decoration but coded signals of sophistication.