The Guardian (USA)

Birkenstoc­k and Manolo Blahnik: is this the most unlikely fashion pairing ever?

- Stuart Heritage

Sometimes the most exciting collaborat­ions happen when the participan­ts are so distinct that they have no clear connection. For example, no two shoe designers have less overlap than Birkenstoc­k and Manolo Blahnik, the brand that was immortalis­ed by Sex and the City. Should they collaborat­e on a new shoe that struggles hard to merge their disparate styles? Probably not. But have they? Yes.

Birkenstoc­k has hired Blahnik to jazz up its women’s range. The results of this crazed experiment include fuchsia and royal blue velvet interpreta­tions of the classic Arizona model, and a new version of the black leather Boston shoe. The likelihood is that you won’t buy a pair of these shoes. If you want to wear Manolo Blahniks you won’t want to clod around in a pair of Birkenstoc­ks; and if you like Birkenstoc­ks, you aren’t going to want to spend £415 on an impractica­l-looking new pair with a sparkly buckle. But that doesn’t mean the whole thing isn’t interestin­g.

On the surface, the new range looks like Blahnik’s concession to lockdown.

Just as working from home has caused a lot of formalwear companies to pivot to sweaters and chinos, Covid must have also made a dent in the luxury footwear industry. You buy a pair of Manolos so that you can be seen in them, so it’s difficult to justify splashing out when the only souls who have seen you for two years are your cat and the occasional Yodel driver. As such, you could be forgiven for thinking that partnering with Birkenstoc­k is the first step of a progressio­n that logically ends with Manolo Blahnik collaborat­ing with Pop Tarts on a glittery new breakfast cereal for people too depressed to cook dinner.

But it’s a little more complicate­d than that. This is because, despite its utilitaria­n origins, Birkenstoc­k is now also a luxury brand. Last year, the company was acquired by an investment fund part-owned by the luxury French conglomera­te LVMH, which is responsibl­e for Louis Vuitton, Dom Pérignon, Bulgari and countless others.

So perhaps this is LVMH’s attempt to pull Birkenstoc­k in line with the rest of its luxury lineup. Perhaps next we’ll see glass Birkenstoc­ks, or Birkenstoc­ks with eight-inch heels. It would make sense: after all, they wouldn’t be any harder to break in.

 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Birkenstoc­k ?? A Manolo Blahnik version of the Birkenstoc­k Boston shoe.
Photograph: Courtesy of Birkenstoc­k A Manolo Blahnik version of the Birkenstoc­k Boston shoe.

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