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Manolo Blahnik Ivory

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Manolo Blahnik Ivory Silk Bridal Shoe with Floral Accents Size 7
Manolo Blahnik Ivory Silk Bridal Shoe with Floral Accents Size 7

Manolo Blahnik Ivory Silk Bridal Shoe with Floral Accents Size 7

By Manolo Blahnik

Located in Los Angeles, CA

This Manolo Blahnik shoes are composed of an ivory silk and feature floral silk accents. In good

Category

20th Century Italian Shoes

Manolo Blahnik Ivory Satin Hangisi Pumps Size 39
Manolo Blahnik Ivory Satin Hangisi Pumps Size 39

Manolo Blahnik Ivory Satin Hangisi Pumps Size 39

By Manolo Blahnik

Located in Dubai, Al Qouz 2

The 10.5cm heels of this pair of Manolo Blahnik pumps will reflect grace and luxury in every step

Category

2010s Heels

1990s Manolo Blahnik Bicolor Sling back Sandals
1990s Manolo Blahnik Bicolor Sling back Sandals

1990s Manolo Blahnik Bicolor Sling back Sandals

By Manolo Blahnik

Located in Lugo (RA), IT

Sophisticated Manolo Blahnik bicolor ivory and black patent leather slingback sandals with an

Category

1990s Shoes

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Manolo Blahnik Ivory For Sale on 1stDibs

You are likely to find exactly the vintage or contemporary manolo blahnik ivory you’re looking for on 1stDibs, as there is a broad range for sale. If you’re looking for an option in White and you’re unable to find the right fit, there are plenty of variations in Beige, Pink and more. You’re likely to find the perfect manolo blahnik ivory among the distinctive accessories we have available, which includes versions made as long ago as the 20th Century as well as those produced as recently as the 21st Century.

How Much is a Manolo Blahnik Ivory?

On average, a manolo blahnik ivory on 1stDibs sells for $857, while they’re typically $325 on the low end and $1,024 for the highest priced versions of this item.

Manolo Blahnik for sale on 1stDibs

There may be no designer with as wide a breadth of references as the fashion and footwear icon Manolo Blahnik, whose stated sources of inspiration for the creation of his sublime shoes include — but are not limited to — Diana Vreeland, ancient Greece, 21st-century architecture, Spanish cinema and Piet Mondrian.

It’s a fittingly robust list for someone who has spent a lifetime in the self-described “pursuit of beauty.”

Born in 1942 in Spain’s Canary Islands, Blahnik had an early exposure to shoemaking: During World War II, his designer-shoe-loving mother enlisted a local cobbler to teach her to make her own footwear from available materials. The young Blahnik was intrigued.

After briefly studying law in Switzerland with the intention of becoming a diplomat, Blahnik moved to Paris, where he took a job in a vintage clothing shop while studying art at École des Beaux-Arts as well as set design at the art school of the Louvre. It wasn’t until years later, however, that he would realize his calling as a shoe designer. In the late 1960s, Blahnik relocated to London, where he worked for both the Sunday Times and Vogue. In the early 1970s, the renowned American Vogue editor Diana Vreeland saw his sketches and urged him to pursue footwear.

After a debut collection for celebrated fashion designer Ossie Clark — featuring models that Blahnik had gotten to know through his work in the fashion industry, among them Twiggy — received acclaim, he created footwear for illustrious dressmaker Jean Muir and apprenticed with professional shoemakers in London to perfect his craft. By 1973 he had bought out the shoe boutique Zapata and made it his own. Bloomingdale’s introduced him to the American market with a collection a few years later.

Vintage Manolo Blahnik shoes are famous for their theatricality, as the designer is well known for the whimsical, fantastical elements he brings to footwear, often in an explosive palette. “I have always approached color in a bold way, from all angles and variations,” he once said. “Always searching for the poetry of an impossible color.” Tack on teetering height as a trademark that took shape from early on.

“Those poor girls couldn’t walk properly, but people loved it,” the designer recalled of his early models. “Sir Cecil Beaton said to me, ‘Is this a new way of walking?’” To take it from pop culture, it indeed might have been: People are still talking about the night that Bianca Jagger dazzled, horseback, at Studio 54 in a Halston dress and Blahnik shoes on her 30th birthday, and, decades later, the footwear icon was rendered a household name during the long-running television series Sex and the City.

Today, Manolo Blahnik remains a virtual synonym for luxury shoes. Find a range of his footwear and handbags on 1stDibs.