- The
pigache, also
known by
other names, was a kind of shoe with a
sharp upturned point at the toes that
became po****r in
Western Europe during the Romanesque...
- era's
ecclesiastical histories, she pla**** a role in the po****rization of
pigache footwear and
founded a
daughter house of
Fontevraud Abbey at Hautes-Bruyeres...
-
Penny loafer, see Slip-on
Peranakan beaded slippers Peshawari chappal Pigache Platform shoe
Plimsoll Pointinini Poulaine Pul****
Racing flat
Racing shoes...
-
restaurant chain based in Detroit, Michigan, US Ram's horn (shoe), or
pigache, a type of shoe with a long, pointed,
turned up toe Bukkehorn, an ancient...
- over the instep. Broad-toed
shoes were worn by men, women, and
children Pigache – a
pointed style of shoe
which was
fashionable earlier in
medieval Europe...
-
Episcopal sandals Hessian Lotus shoes Manchu platform shoes Pampooties Pattens Pigaches Poulaines Socci Tiger-head
shoes Turnshoes Accessories Ascot tie Belt hook...
-
first became a
major trend in
Western fashion with the late-11th-century
pigache. They were
ridiculed by
poets and
historians and
censured by the clergy...
- worn in
Mexico and the
southern United States since the 21st
century Pigache, worn in 11th–13th
century Europe Poulaines, worn in 14th & 15th century...
- of a scorpion. It may also
refer to Scorpion's tail,
another name for
pigache shoes Scorpion's tail,
another name for
plants in
genus Scorpiurus Scorpion...
- women. The term was also
applied to the
exaggerated toes of the
medieval pigache and
poulaine shoes, as in a 14th-century
statute of
Oxford University....