Fashion alert ! Loafers Are the New Sneakers

DdBob

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Over the past decade, the globe’s leading fashion houses have been engaged in a sneakers arms race, rolling out increasingly flamboyant styles aimed at turning heads, garnering clicks, and seizing ground in the exploding luxury-kicks market. Loafers, on the other hand, have quietly held court on the opposite side of the sartorial spectrum: a sensible, versatile option for men whose wardrobes are defined by tradition, not trends. But in a post-pandemic world where classic menswear is roaring back into favor, these once disparate forms have begun to feel—and, in some cases, look—more similar than ever. At a time when pairing sneakers with a suit is anything but subversive, splashy, attention-grabbing loafers have become the unexpected choice for adding some visual punch to an outfit.


“Our customers are increasingly graduating and gravitating toward loafers,” says Reginald Christian, men’s fashion market manager for Saks Fifth Avenue. Referring to Gucci’s expansive range of Cuban-heeled, mixed-media, and collaboration options (the last of which includes standout styles created with Adidas and sporting a colorful remix of the German athletic brand’s trademark three stripes), he says, “It’s this idea of, ‘All right, you have the classic horse bit—what else can we offer that still feels in the realm of a slip-on, easy, dress-casual shoe?’ ” In addition to retooled staples currently offered by Gucci, Saint Laurent, and Celine, the answer includes Casablanca’s candy-colored Masao San Memphis loafers and Manolo Blahnik’s raffia Padstow slip-ons, which feature a soft, collapsible leather heel to complement the laissez-faire attitude of their woven uppers.

For Christopher Echevarria, of Blackstock & Weber, a desire to inject loafers with the visual flair of his favorite sneakers was a driving force behind launching the company in 2018. “I wanted to pick a shoe that was an icon, a static piece in American menswear—what better way to go than the loafer?” he says, citing Nike Air Force 1s (and their infinite permutations) as a template. Since its inception, Blackstock & Weber has delivered versions in everything from pony-hair animal print to genuine tennis-ball felt. Even the label’s single-color full-leather models add intrigue with their unconventionally chunky lug soles.

Fresh materials and daring color schemes naturally make such lavish loafers stand out on shelves, but what about wearing them? That part, it turns out, is actually quite simple. “Wear them exactly how you would your favorite pair of sneakers,” says Lawrence Schlossman, cohost of the men’s style podcast Throwing Fits, who likes to match statement loafers with a standard uniform of button-ups and jeans.
 
It’s a horrible trend. Even Dr. Martens tried to get in on it but theirs disappeared from the home page after a week. The whole point of Dr. Martens is that they don’t follow trends so you can always get shoes that fit well.
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I've got a pair of 20 year old Florsheim penny loafers (oxblood, of course) that have been resoled and a pair of Sperry Topsiders, which I believe falls under the same rubric. I probably have close to ten pairs of what might be termed "sneakers" (including refereeing shoes, low-cut hiking shoes, runners, trail runners, Sambas, etc.) However, I have moved away from wearing sneakers for casual wear - save the white NB 623s I originally bought for water polo reffing - and now mostly wear the topsiders, loafers, or hikers (Merrell Moabs) in clement weather waterproof boots in inclement weather. I guess I'm a trend setter!
 
My gosh, Bass/Weejuns were all the rage when I was in junior high school. We got two pairs of shoes for the entire school year, to include a pair of loafers & a pair of saddle oxfords. We were so cool!
 
They are straddling the line. They are both yet they are neither. They look terribly uncomfortable.
I’ve been liking them as the most “just barely business casual” option I can get away with in the post Covid work from wherever world.
Three years ago I wore dress shoes all day everyday. Now I wear slippers working from home or HeyDudes when I go into the office. In that context I can say they’re veeerrrryyyy comfortable.


I still don’t like the lace dongle thingy tho
 
I need solid support that most sneaker-type shoes don't provide. Beside the hippie cred associated with Birkenstocks, they are the only shoes that I can wear comfortably. I do miss the days when I could wear high-top sneakers, though.
 
The closest I've come to owning loafers would be a pair of checkered slip-on Vans, a year before that Fast Times movie came out.

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“sensible, versatile option for men whose wardrobes are defined by tradition, not trends”

this says all you need to know
 
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