More instant flats

About a month ago I made some mention of CAMiLEON Heels, which can be an inch and a half high or three and a quarter, depending on how you set them.

Sheila Driving Heel
Now comes a driving shoe for women, based on the same idea if not precisely the same technology. Devised on behalf of Sheilas’ Wheels, an insurance company in the UK targeting female drivers — they offer, for instance, handbag coverage up to £300 as part of Comprehensive — the Sheila Driving Heel is switchable between heel and flat with the touch of a button. It’s being touted, of course, as a safety measure: “It’s astonishing,” says Sheilas spokesperson Jacky Brown, “that so many women are putting themselves, their passengers and other drivers at risk by wearing the wrong shoe or no shoe at all whilst behind the wheel. Stilettos, sling-backs and strappy sandals aren’t the sensible choice when it comes to controlling a car.” And while driving with no shoes is permissible Stateside and in parts of the UK, for some reason it’s illegal in Scotland.

I must admit here that I can’t see where this mysterious button is located, and neither can the writer for Autoblog, who also complains that “we waited almost a week for them to send us a pic of the shoes,” which pic I have duly appropriated and slightly cropped.

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4 comments

  1. Winston »

    20 June 2007 · 4:58 am

    The button is undoubtedly on the Bluetooth remote control which is not pictured.

  2. Sereena X »

    20 June 2007 · 10:32 am

    Driving with shoes on is like touching yourself with animal handler gloves.

  3. miriam »

    21 June 2007 · 8:36 am

    I bet the heel folds up under the shoe. Especially when you are walking. Stuff like that never works in real life.

  4. mike »

    25 June 2007 · 10:15 am

    Is that a pink racing stripe?

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