Who Invented Sandals
Jan 08, 2022
To be exact, it is difficult to find a designated inventor for any kind of shoes, and so is plastic sandals, because the generation of shoes is inseparable from the natural environment and human wisdom.
In ancient times, due to the uneven land and the severe cold and heat of the climate, human beings instinctively wanted to protect their feet, so shoes appeared: animal skins and leaves that simply wrapped their feet became the earliest shoes in human history. The documents preserved by ancient humans can still provide us with a wonderful history of shoes.
The remains of Native American shoes were found in Missouri in 8000 BC.
In 3300 BC, an ice merchant who died in the mountains of France left a pair of primitive grass woven shoes.
Oil paintings about shoes or shoemakers can be found in the temple of Egypt in 3000 BC.
Barefoot in AD 100 is the most fundamental difference between Greek slaves and free men in clothing.
In AD 200, the Roman emperor Marco Aurelius declared that no one was allowed to wear red sandals except him and his heirs.
In the 15th century, knights wore shoes with long toe caps (24 inches long), and the laws that advocated frugality clearly stipulated the length of toe caps.
High heels were invented under the influence of Leonardo da Vinci in the early 16th century.
In the mid-16th century, 30 inch high heels swept the whole of southern Europe.
In the early 17th century, as one of the most popular ornaments, shoelaces appeared.
At the end of the 17th century, due to mistranslation, Cinderella's Flannelette slippers in French fairy tales became Cinderella's crystal shoes.
In the mid-18th century, it took nearly a hundred years to finally replace the traditional shoe-making method, and the first shoe factory appeared. Soon, the first shoe shop appeared in Boston.
Flat shoes and Greek beach shoes were very popular in the early 19th century.
The first pair of sneakers (also known as rubber soled canvas shoes) appeared in the mid-19th century. Later, Elias and Howe invented the first needle car.
At the end of the 19th century, buttons, an indispensable decoration for clothing, were also applied to shoes and soon became a fashion standard.
Before this century, the shoemaker, like the carpenter, blacksmith and tailor, was a lowly profession. The design of shoes is not regarded as an independent and artistic work, but as a part of the whole shoemaking process.
Famous shoe designers mainly rise in Europe, because in the United States, with the rapid development of large-scale production of modern shoe industry, individual shoemakers are redundant. The American shoe industry originated in the colonies of New England, where farmers made their own shoes in the kitchen in winter. The whole family is involved in the work. Men cut leather and stick soles, and women sew shoe edges. The workbench used by the colonial shoemakers is now a collector's item. Having mastered the skill of making shoes, some courageous farmers set up small shoe workshops. Three or four workers assembled the shoe materials sewn by the local shoemaker, put them on the bottom, and then made them into finished shoes.
In 1750, a shoe factory was built in lean, Massachusetts, which further developed the local shoe-making technology. There, workers no longer make shoes independently, and each production link of shoes is in the charge of a specially trained person. The production line began to take shape. At first, the shoes were still made to order, but in order to make the workers have something to do in the off-season, the shoe shop owner began to make shoes without reservation. These shoes are called shoes for sale and are displayed in the windows of local stores. In the early days, the Harvey brothers used carriages to carry shoes for sale and sold them in nearby places.
In 1793, they opened their first shoe retail store in Boston, selling finished shoes every Wednesday and Saturday. Since the mid-18th century, inventors have been committed to the improvement of sewing machines. It was not until 1790 that the first sewing machine dedicated to leather processing was transformed by an Englishman named Thomas saint. It's almost just an awl that can punch holes in leather vertically. Mark of England Sir brownler was the chief engineer of New York Harbor. He invented a press, which can sew the upper and sole with a metal needle. In order to do his duty in the British war against Napoleon, brownler produced 400 pairs of shoes a day with the help of disabled soldiers. After the war, the British shoemaking industry returned to manual operation.







