And just like that… Carrie’s Jimmy Choos are back in stock
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“Sexy, flirty, fun,” says the London-based designer Conner Ives, when asked to describe the essence of a Jimmy Choo shoe. And “always about glamour”, adds fashion writer Alexander Fury. “There is a sense of occasion with every piece.” As the luxury footwear brand best known for its sparkly stilettos approaches its 30th anniversary, the duo have been invited by Choo’s longstanding creative director Sandra Choi, niece of the eponymous founder, to revisit the archive and co-curate a selection for re-edition. “Almost like an exhibition of greatest hits,” says Fury, whose earliest Choo memory dates back to a 1996 issue of British Vogue, for which he spoke to Choi about a pair of boots from the winter collection. Ives, meanwhile, recalls an immaculate pair of ’90s black ankle boots that he spotted in his mother’s closet as a child.

Jimmy Choo leather python-print The Boot, £1,395

Leopard-print The Leo, as worn by Sarah Jessica Parker in Sex and the City, £675


Metallic nappa The Thong, £1,195

Suede and feather 72138, £775
The resulting edit, launching tomorrow, comprises eight styles drawn from the brand’s first five years. From “The Strappy”, a thong satin sandal recovered from the brand’s debut SS97 collection, to “The Leo” and “The Bow”, which explore Choo’s flair for animal prints, and the more abstractly named “72138” – a delicate suede lilac slingback made famous on the foot of Carrie Bradshaw in season three of Sex and the City – they are “faithful recreations”, says Fury. To mark the year a total of 2,025 pairs will be produced in the brand’s Italian factories, now run by successive generations, with only minor modifications to the materials to make them more responsible: ie, “The Boot” was originally made in python but the re-edition uses a printed leather.

Spotty elaphe-printed leather The Bow, £775

Nubuck The Slide, £595

Metallic nappa The Flower, £1,025

Satin The Strappy, £675
How did they select the final styles? “It was mostly about defining the fashion moment at the time – how these styles have shaped the design aesthetic for the brand. High heels that provoke femininity and glamour, the fantasy of pretty but simple details, the soft, sensual touches,” says Choi. “These are pieces new generations are paying attention to via vintage references, and ‘just like that’” – as Bradshaw would say – “it feels new again.”
Jimmy Choo The Archive: 1997-2001 is available from 20 May, from £595, jimmychoo.com
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