The desire to float like a Sylph across the stage on the tips of their toes is the dream of most ballet students. But where did these shoes – part ethereal magic, part torture device come from?
Here’s pointe shoe history in 60 seconds!
1730s: Marie Camargo invents the Ballet Slipper 1790s: Charles Didelot’s ‘Flying Machine’ allows dancers to float across the stage on the tips of their toes 1820s–1830s: Marie Taglioni and the Romantic Ballerinas create the art of pointe work by darning soft ballet shoes to give more support 1870s–1890s: Italian Shoes set the Imperial Standard adding newspaper and flour paste to create the box of a pointe shoe 1910: Anna Pavlova and Salvatore Capezio add leather to stiffen the soles and provide more support 1920s–1980s:The shoe again adapts to abstraction and new choreography introduced by 20thC choreographers providing dancers greater support as technical demands increase 1993: Gaynor Minden launches a shoe inspired by the shock-absorption found in athletic footwear, opening the door for other designers to experiment with modern materials to improve shoes’ durability and fit 2020’s: Racial protests like the BLM movement spur dancewear companies on to produce pointe shoes in a range of shades to match diverse skin tones.
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