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Aesthetically it’s a wonderful shoe to wear. Medically it’s not so great.
Lynne, to answer your queries:
1) I have most of my shoes in black photo memory boxes purchased from Michaels. They are acid free boxes and are usually on sale for about $3.00 per piece or less. In cases where I have the original box I do store the shoes in the original boxes but I wrap them in acid-free tissue first to buffer them from the highly-acidic cardboard boxes. For boots and oversize shoes, like platforms, that don't fit in the photo memory boxes I have them in largely boxes categorized by type, date, and colour, each wrapped in acid free. Here is a link to the boxes I buy (I buy plain black ones)
http://www.michaels.com/art/online/displayProductPage?productNum=sb0345&channelid=
2) I have heard and also repeat that story about the term 'flapper' and its connection to galoshes, however, I don't count galoshes as fashion boots because they are for foul weather wear. It was definately the fashion for collegiate aged women to wear their galoshes open to make a flapping sound, that much is for sure - I have seen pictures of women in the early 1920s doing just that. However, the term 'flapper' was well known by 1920 when a film about a precocious naive schoolgirl was released called The Flapper- http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0011193/
So I suspect wearing galoshes open was typical of the sort of behaviour a flapper (naive, precocious teenager) would do, but not the origin of the term.
3) I WISH! Nobody pays for guest lecturers.