Original of Slippers
Slippers are frequently made out of soft materials such as felt, terrycloth or soft leather, plastic, rubber, or leather, and often have thick soles.
Slippers may be shaped like a shoe (foot inserted through top), or may have no heel, so the foot can be slipped in the back. They now come in many colourful designs – cartoon characters, patterns and animals are often used to decorate this type of footwear.
There are many kinds of slippers, including animal slippers, hotel slippers, indoor slippers and so on. The traditional British slipper of the Victorian era is the Albert slipper, named after Prince Albert, and is a velvet slipper with plain leather sole and quilted silk lining. It is worn about the house, particularly with black tie, but in modern or fashionable use is worn sometimes outside in informal settings.
In Japan, one type of the latest fasion of slipper is fluffy crogs buy some now evolved from those made during the Meiji period (1868 to 1912). The Japanese were accustomed to taking off their shoes before entering their homes and donning slippers at the threshold—this was not the case for western cultures, where customs regarding domesticity differed and slippers were mainly worn by a home's residents in the evening. For the Japanese it was problematic for foreigners who did not know or follow their customs to enter homes with their shoes on. Thus, special indoor slippers were made for the foreigners to pull over their shoes in order to keep the indoors sanitary. Such slippers are in widespread use in Japan today by citizenry and gaijin alike. Toilet slippers provide further demarcation between areas considered clean and unclean within the household itself...
Slippers also evolved much earlier in India. A Southern Song dynasty officer Zhou Qu Fei (1135-1189) stationed in Quanxi province of China, described two types of slippers he saw in Jiaozhi (now Vietnam) in his 1178 book Ling Wai Dai Da; both types of slippers had leather bottom, one type has a small post about an inch long with a mushroom shape top up front, people wore this slipper by holding the post between their toes; another type of slipper had a cross-shaped leather cover across the top of the leather bottom. Zhou noted that these slipper looked exactly like the slippers on the feet of arhats in some paintings. He noted further that the people of Kulam in Southern India wore a kind of red slipper which looked exactly like the slipper of arhats in painting.
Slippers may be shaped like a shoe (foot inserted through top), or may have no heel, so the foot can be slipped in the back. They now come in many colourful designs – cartoon characters, patterns and animals are often used to decorate this type of footwear.
There are many kinds of slippers, including animal slippers, hotel slippers, indoor slippers and so on. The traditional British slipper of the Victorian era is the Albert slipper, named after Prince Albert, and is a velvet slipper with plain leather sole and quilted silk lining. It is worn about the house, particularly with black tie, but in modern or fashionable use is worn sometimes outside in informal settings.
In Japan, one type of the latest fasion of slipper is fluffy crogs buy some now evolved from those made during the Meiji period (1868 to 1912). The Japanese were accustomed to taking off their shoes before entering their homes and donning slippers at the threshold—this was not the case for western cultures, where customs regarding domesticity differed and slippers were mainly worn by a home's residents in the evening. For the Japanese it was problematic for foreigners who did not know or follow their customs to enter homes with their shoes on. Thus, special indoor slippers were made for the foreigners to pull over their shoes in order to keep the indoors sanitary. Such slippers are in widespread use in Japan today by citizenry and gaijin alike. Toilet slippers provide further demarcation between areas considered clean and unclean within the household itself...
Slippers also evolved much earlier in India. A Southern Song dynasty officer Zhou Qu Fei (1135-1189) stationed in Quanxi province of China, described two types of slippers he saw in Jiaozhi (now Vietnam) in his 1178 book Ling Wai Dai Da; both types of slippers had leather bottom, one type has a small post about an inch long with a mushroom shape top up front, people wore this slipper by holding the post between their toes; another type of slipper had a cross-shaped leather cover across the top of the leather bottom. Zhou noted that these slipper looked exactly like the slippers on the feet of arhats in some paintings. He noted further that the people of Kulam in Southern India wore a kind of red slipper which looked exactly like the slipper of arhats in painting.





