Retro Shoes ~ Black Patent Mary Janes w/ 3" Heel

Retro Shoes ~ Black Patent Mary Janes w/ 3" Heel

Sexy...less than $30...and retro! What's not to love?

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  • Vintage hot pink boots! So 80s!!

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  • Just place the ever-so-dainty toe of this playful pump under the crack of your very own door and it will be held open in style.

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  • It's the sensual low-cut curve of these that give them their oomph.

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  • I adore these shoes! Sweet and retro sexy. They'd take your pencil skirt and cardigan from the average to the sexy secretary level in a pinch.

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  • These vintage inspired T-strap maryjane pumps will add retro glamour to any outfit.

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  • Want want want want want want want. WANT! This are fabulously witchy but in that sexy seductress way - like Nicole Kidman in Practical Magic.

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  • Great Brand - NYLA! Pink "Gradient" Color, which is so "IN' right now... Im just now starting to see more&more show lines with the gradient coloring to them! With a concealed platform and 4.5" Heel, these high fashion pumps are... Great Brand - NYLA! Pink "Gradient" Color, which is so "IN' right now... Im just now starting to see more&more show lines with the gradient coloring to them! With a concealed platform and 4.5" Heel, these high fashion pumps are modern, edgy and oh-so-sexy! Genuine leather uppers, man made bottom. Covered high heel with gold contrast on the inside. The gradient color means that they blend from baby pink to darker pink at the back of the heel. Very urban and sophisticated.

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  • Oh it is Christmas - red velvet with a bow on top & my ever so favorite peep toe - Santa is coming for Christmas.

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  • Rockabilly funk platforms for trick or treating....

  • Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made m... Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made me cool. I never wore the platform versions. But the ones I did wear, I wore to death- as in the toe flaps were flapping before I would discard them. So, so ferocious were my creepers. Here's a little Wiki nugget for you: Creepers or brothel creepers are a type of shoe that gained popularity in the 1950s with the rise of rockabilly and the Teddy Boy youth subcultures (in the United States and the United Kingdom respectively). They are considered a classic item of 1950s fashion, along with elements such as drainpipe trousers, draped jackets, bolo ties, quiff and pompadour haircuts, and velvet or electric blue clothes. Creepers were invented in 1949 by George Cox and initially marketed under the Hamilton brand name, which was based on George Cox Jr.'s middle name[1]. The brothel creeper was a big hit throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Malcolm McLaren gave the shoe a new lease of life in the early 1970s when he began selling the shoes from his Let it Rock shop in London's Kings Road. The shoes were snapped up by his Teddy Boy clientele, and when McLaren and his partner Vivienne Westwood decided to change the shop into a more rocker-oriented fashion, the brothel creeper still proved to be popular amongst the customers[2]. The shoe has since been adopted by some members of other subcultures, such as ska, punk, psychobilly, greasers and goth. In 2003 Osiris Shoes produced the Ali Boulala, which is a brothel creeper-influenced skateboarding shoe.

  • Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made m... Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made me cool. I never wore the platform versions. But the ones I did wear, I wore to death- as in the toe flaps were flapping before I would discard them. So, so ferocious were my creepers. Here's a little Wiki nugget for you: Creepers or brothel creepers are a type of shoe that gained popularity in the 1950s with the rise of rockabilly and the Teddy Boy youth subcultures (in the United States and the United Kingdom respectively). They are considered a classic item of 1950s fashion, along with elements such as drainpipe trousers, draped jackets, bolo ties, quiff and pompadour haircuts, and velvet or electric blue clothes. Creepers were invented in 1949 by George Cox and initially marketed under the Hamilton brand name, which was based on George Cox Jr.'s middle name[1]. The brothel creeper was a big hit throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Malcolm McLaren gave the shoe a new lease of life in the early 1970s when he began selling the shoes from his Let it Rock shop in London's Kings Road. The shoes were snapped up by his Teddy Boy clientele, and when McLaren and his partner Vivienne Westwood decided to change the shop into a more rocker-oriented fashion, the brothel creeper still proved to be popular amongst the customers[2]. The shoe has since been adopted by some members of other subcultures, such as ska, punk, psychobilly, greasers and goth. In 2003 Osiris Shoes produced the Ali Boulala, which is a brothel creeper-influenced skateboarding shoe.

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  • Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made m... Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made me cool. I never wore the platform versions. But the ones I did wear, I wore to death- as in the toe flaps were flapping before I would discard them. So, so ferocious were my creepers. Here's a little Wiki nugget for you: Creepers or brothel creepers are a type of shoe that gained popularity in the 1950s with the rise of rockabilly and the Teddy Boy youth subcultures (in the United States and the United Kingdom respectively). They are considered a classic item of 1950s fashion, along with elements such as drainpipe trousers, draped jackets, bolo ties, quiff and pompadour haircuts, and velvet or electric blue clothes. Creepers were invented in 1949 by George Cox and initially marketed under the Hamilton brand name, which was based on George Cox Jr.'s middle name[1]. The brothel creeper was a big hit throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Malcolm McLaren gave the shoe a new lease of life in the early 1970s when he began selling the shoes from his Let it Rock shop in London's Kings Road. The shoes were snapped up by his Teddy Boy clientele, and when McLaren and his partner Vivienne Westwood decided to change the shop into a more rocker-oriented fashion, the brothel creeper still proved to be popular amongst the customers[2]. The shoe has since been adopted by some members of other subcultures, such as ska, punk, psychobilly, greasers and goth. In 2003 Osiris Shoes produced the Ali Boulala, which is a brothel creeper-influenced skateboarding shoe.

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  • Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made m... Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made me cool. I never wore the platform versions. But the ones I did wear, I wore to death- as in the toe flaps were flapping before I would discard them. So, so ferocious were my creepers. Here's a little Wiki nugget for you: Creepers or brothel creepers are a type of shoe that gained popularity in the 1950s with the rise of rockabilly and the Teddy Boy youth subcultures (in the United States and the United Kingdom respectively). They are considered a classic item of 1950s fashion, along with elements such as drainpipe trousers, draped jackets, bolo ties, quiff and pompadour haircuts, and velvet or electric blue clothes. Creepers were invented in 1949 by George Cox and initially marketed under the Hamilton brand name, which was based on George Cox Jr.'s middle name[1]. The brothel creeper was a big hit throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Malcolm McLaren gave the shoe a new lease of life in the early 1970s when he began selling the shoes from his Let it Rock shop in London's Kings Road. The shoes were snapped up by his Teddy Boy clientele, and when McLaren and his partner Vivienne Westwood decided to change the shop into a more rocker-oriented fashion, the brothel creeper still proved to be popular amongst the customers[2]. The shoe has since been adopted by some members of other subcultures, such as ska, punk, psychobilly, greasers and goth. In 2003 Osiris Shoes produced the Ali Boulala, which is a brothel creeper-influenced skateboarding shoe.

  • Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made m... Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made me cool. I never wore the platform versions. But the ones I did wear, I wore to death- as in the toe flaps were flapping before I would discard them. So, so ferocious were my creepers. Here's a little Wiki nugget for you: Creepers or brothel creepers are a type of shoe that gained popularity in the 1950s with the rise of rockabilly and the Teddy Boy youth subcultures (in the United States and the United Kingdom respectively). They are considered a classic item of 1950s fashion, along with elements such as drainpipe trousers, draped jackets, bolo ties, quiff and pompadour haircuts, and velvet or electric blue clothes. Creepers were invented in 1949 by George Cox and initially marketed under the Hamilton brand name, which was based on George Cox Jr.'s middle name[1]. The brothel creeper was a big hit throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Malcolm McLaren gave the shoe a new lease of life in the early 1970s when he began selling the shoes from his Let it Rock shop in London's Kings Road. The shoes were snapped up by his Teddy Boy clientele, and when McLaren and his partner Vivienne Westwood decided to change the shop into a more rocker-oriented fashion, the brothel creeper still proved to be popular amongst the customers[2]. The shoe has since been adopted by some members of other subcultures, such as ska, punk, psychobilly, greasers and goth. In 2003 Osiris Shoes produced the Ali Boulala, which is a brothel creeper-influenced skateboarding shoe.

  • Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made m... Does anyone out there remember Creepers? I bought my first pair- merlot suede/black leather, if I recall- on Kings Road in London in the 80's. When I went back to California that fall, those shoes- and those shoes alone- made me cool. I never wore the platform versions. But the ones I did wear, I wore to death- as in the toe flaps were flapping before I would discard them. So, so ferocious were my creepers. Here's a little Wiki nugget for you: Creepers or brothel creepers are a type of shoe that gained popularity in the 1950s with the rise of rockabilly and the Teddy Boy youth subcultures (in the United States and the United Kingdom respectively). They are considered a classic item of 1950s fashion, along with elements such as drainpipe trousers, draped jackets, bolo ties, quiff and pompadour haircuts, and velvet or electric blue clothes. Creepers were invented in 1949 by George Cox and initially marketed under the Hamilton brand name, which was based on George Cox Jr.'s middle name[1]. The brothel creeper was a big hit throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Malcolm McLaren gave the shoe a new lease of life in the early 1970s when he began selling the shoes from his Let it Rock shop in London's Kings Road. The shoes were snapped up by his Teddy Boy clientele, and when McLaren and his partner Vivienne Westwood decided to change the shop into a more rocker-oriented fashion, the brothel creeper still proved to be popular amongst the customers[2]. The shoe has since been adopted by some members of other subcultures, such as ska, punk, psychobilly, greasers and goth. In 2003 Osiris Shoes produced the Ali Boulala, which is a brothel creeper-influenced skateboarding shoe.

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  • It's okay to be a diva in these shoes; in fact it's unavoidable. After all, with a sequined body and a suede radical red upper with gold patterning resembling licking flames, these shoes can only be described as divine. It's no se... It's okay to be a diva in these shoes; in fact it's unavoidable. After all, with a sequined body and a suede radical red upper with gold patterning resembling licking flames, these shoes can only be described as divine. It's no secret that these shoes are made to attract attention, and guess what? So are you!

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  • I have these in red, stone and black. The red are obviously my favourite, but i cannot even COUNT how many times I've been stopped on the street and complimented on these shoes. They look like underwear: lacy, sexy, frilly, red un... I have these in red, stone and black. The red are obviously my favourite, but i cannot even COUNT how many times I've been stopped on the street and complimented on these shoes. They look like underwear: lacy, sexy, frilly, red underwear. Men have stopped to tell my that my shoes are gorgeous - MEN! When do men ever notice shoes? (not gay men either!) I love them, and I almost considered buying another pair just to keep clean and fresh, since satin spoils so easily.

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  • Gold, copper, pewter and silver lattice heels from ModCloth. A little bit retro, a whole lot glamourous and a whole lot fabulous!

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  • Retro inspired heels with pretty detailing around the toes. White pinup pumps for a fresh and pure look. Also available in Black. DETAILS: Soft White Retro High Heel Peep Toe Pinup Pumps with 4.25" Stiletto Heel & Concealed Pl... Retro inspired heels with pretty detailing around the toes. White pinup pumps for a fresh and pure look. Also available in Black. DETAILS: Soft White Retro High Heel Peep Toe Pinup Pumps with 4.25" Stiletto Heel & Concealed Platform. We love the criss cross knotted detail over the vamp and the squared off toe. So stylin' you will want to wear them just about every where! Sizing runs consistent with standard US footwear sizing. Soft pleather makes these heels tres comfortable! All man made materials.

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  • could I please have these in yellow coz I'm going crazy over everything yellow right now and these shoes are too hot not to own....

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  • These heels are so killer glam! Would make you look incredible in just about anything. Wear these with a pencil skirt and fishnets, yowzers! Available in several shades - trendy and functional.

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  • Super snazzy(geez, that word used to be only used by my granny?) and sexy these black and white pumps will go places.

  • Yowzers! Traffic stopping shoes so killer pinup style!

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