Wonderful, Ridiculous, Head-Scratchingly Pointy Mexican Boots Are Now A Designer Item

Mexican Ridicolously Pointy Boots Are Now A Designer's Item

  • Hide caption Francisco de Jesus Garcia, 18, shows off his pink pointy boots in Matehuala, Mexico. The flashy pointy boot craze has swept through Matehuala, spread to nearby cities and is being taken by migrants across the border into the United States. Previous Next Dario Lopez-Mills/AP
  • Hide caption The Parranderos dance crew waits its turn to show off its moves at the Mesquit Rodeo nightclub in Matehuala in 2011. Previous Next Dario Lopez-Mills/AP
  • Hide caption Young men create their own pointy boots that they will use at a dance competition at night in Matehuala. Previous Next Dario Lopez-Mills/AP
  • Hide caption A man wearing his extra long pointy boots stands next to women at a nightclub in Matehuala. Previous Next Dario Lopez-Mills/AP
  • Hide caption A man wears long pointy boots as he dances at a Matehuala nightclub. Previous Next Dario Lopez-Mills/AP
  • Hide caption The Aliados dance crew performs at the Mesquit Rodeo nightclub during a dance competition in Matehuala. Previous Next Dario Lopez-Mills/AP
  • Hide caption Guadalupe Silva, 20, takes a break from dancing with his girlfriend, Maria Concepcion Hernandez, 22, at a Matehuala nightclub in 2011. Previous Next Dario Lopez-Mills/AP

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In 2011, KPBS reporter Angela Carone wrote about a fashion trend that started in a rural town in Mexico, had swept parts of Texas, and was leaving her speechless: men wearing ridiculously pointy boots with a wicked upward curl — the tip of some pairs reaching as high as one's waist. "These Mexican pointy boots are so bizarre," she wrote, "I fully expect to see them before [year's] end on the runways of Paris."

Indeed, the boots surfaced in Paris in 2014 at the Comme Des Garcons fashion show for its Spring/Summer 2015 collection. A pair of black boots with 21-inch toe-length is now selling online for a cool $515, according to the Latino-centric culture blog Remezcla.

The boots first appeared in the rural town of Matehuala, San Luis Potosi, Mexico. As Vice explains in a short documentary, things started innocently enough, with people simply altering their boots to make them pointier. Then people from neighboring towns started to compete on pointiness. "Then people started making them pointier and pointer, until it got out of control," says one young man who fashions pointy boots out of water hoses.

The trend coincided with the rise of tribal (pronounced tree-BAL) music, which is a mix of pre-Hispanic sounds, cumbia rhythms and techno. Residents of Matehuala started wearing the boots in tribal dancing competitions at clubs, rodeos and quinceañeras.

The boots eventually made their way to Hispanic neighborhoods in Texas. Even though the boots originated in Matehuala, Erick Rincon, a DJ who skyrocketed the boots' popularity when he featured them in a music video that's been viewed more than 50 million times on YouTube, told Vice they're actually more popular in Texas.

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The trend arguably jumped the shark when the French DJ David Guetta featured them in a video in which a pair of tattooed gangsters buy a pair. The stereotype-fueled video follows a tribal dance crew and culminates in a scene at a rodeo where fireworks shoot out of a pair of boots. But one can still find memes dedicated to the phenomenon, including a T-shirt in which Woody from Toy Story rocks a pair of pointy boots.

The boots are still beloved by tribal fans, and tribal dance crews take a "haters gonna hate" attitude. "It's all about how you feel inside," says one man at the end of the documentary, wearing boots that curl into a little ball like an elf boot.

Overall, the trend is yet another example of how fluid music culture can be between Mexico and the U.S., like when emo music, which has its roots in D.C., became incredibly popular in Mexico, or why narcocorridos, ballads about drug lords and trafficking, are popular on both sides of the border.

Who knows if these incredibly impractical boots will make it to the U.S. mainstream in the way that "chola culture" was appropriated by Rihanna and Selena Gomez. But then again, these boots have already made it across the pond.

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