Vegan Chelsea Boots, and The History of Chelsea Boots

Yonder Bootie from alloy.com

Distressed faux leather upper; rubber sole

in gray and black

$52.90

These boots are known as chelsea boots. A little history lesson for you all from wikipedia:

Chelsea Boots (also known as dealer boots) are tight-fitting, ankle-high boots that originated in the Victorian era, and were originally associated with horse riding. The most notable feature of the Chelsea boot is its elastic siding, running from the heel to the top of the shoe. The design began as a type of riding boots known as paddock boots or jodhpur boots. Chelsea boots were considered an element of the 1960s mod scene, and they have recently become in fashion again amongst men as well as women. Similar boots are the heavier Australian work boots such as those made by Blundstone, which are popular in Australia.

The popular Australian Blundstone boot, known as Blundies.

A similar style was also known as Beatle Boots, since they were popularized by The Beatles, and these shoes were extremely popular with the “mod” crowd in London in the 60s.

I first learned about the Beatle Boot, and the historic importance of the Chelsea Boot in a great book I got at Urban Outfitters called Fifty Shoes That Changed the World. A surprisingly great read! You will learn all about the different types of shoes and their historic significance.

By the way, Alloy.com, a site I remembered from my youth and on a whim decided to check out again, has a surprisingly large selection of trendy “unintentionally vegan” shoes. If you are looking for a going out shoe, you will find one here. Five inch heels abound! I have added Alloy.com to my Vegan Shoe Shopping Guide at the top of my website, so feel free to check that out if you haven’t already.

Comments

  1. Thanks to your article on finding vegan shoes I was able to successfully locate synthetic beatle boots. I found a pair that are exactly what I was looking for and under the that fifty dollar unintentionally-vegan threshold you suggested, but are listed as genuine leather. I wonder if there is a way to get a straight answer from a seller as to whether theyre fake or not? In this case, he might not want to reveal theyre fake for obvious reasons. Great work.

    • admin says:

      OH man! That’s such a tough call. Will you send me the link? Maybe I could tell since I have some experience with it? But probably my guess is as good as yours. I wish I knew a way to get a seller to admit if it was real or not, but I don’t know what would be the best method. I think beatle boots are a pretty common style so if they are leather, I bet you will find another pair in the near future that aren’t. If you send me the link and don’t end up getting these, i can keep an eye out for you. I feel like the site asos would be a good bet for find some mens vegan chelsea boots. As well as “good guys don’t wear leather” I know has some cool ones but they’re more $.

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