Beauty

It's Knee-High Boot Season—Here's How Everyone Will Be Styling Them This Fall

Eliza Huber  Mon, 14 Aug 2023  Who What Wear

The fashion industry likes to consider fall as "boot season," but if you ask me, there's only one shafted shoe style that matters, and those are the ones that settle right below the knee and make every outfit infinitely more refined. Knee-high boots are classic for a reason. They go with everything, provide far more stability than any sandal or slingback can, and protect you from the dropping temperatures that might not be here yet, but will be very soon (count on it). A good pair will get you all the way through autumn—even if you wear them every day—and winter, not to mention spring and summer (or am I the only one who can't give up my knee-highs no matter how hot it gets?).

There's only one problem. Every footwear designer on the planet makes boots in the fall. It's basically law. And though my workplace pays me to navigate through clothes, bags, and shoes all day, I'm pretty sure a majority of others do not. That's why I went ahead and spent a few hours finding every chic pair on the market, not to mention a bevy of outfits to inspire your styling of them, and dropped them all in an easy, effortless list below. Thank me later when your boots arrive and you can't stop wearing them. 

I've long been under the impression that no outfit is easier and chicer than an LBD and knee-high boots. Add a really stellar coat, be it a super-starched trench or a wool duster, for the fall, and tights for the winter, and it becomes a year-round uniform.

Five years ago, getting me in a pair of sock boots would be as hard of a feat as getting me to wear gaucho pants or a lace-trim, extra-long camisole. Nowadays, though, they're my favorite style by a mile. These are vintage Jimmy Choo from the '90s, and I wore them throughout NYFW last February without a single blister but with a dozen or so compliments. 

The band CAKE really knew what they were talking about when they wrote the lyrics for "Short Skirt/Long Jacket," though they failed to notice one key piece of the outfit puzzle: Western-style knee-high boots, which add the perfect level of kitsch to every look. 

Keeping it classic with some round-toe, black knee-high boots is never a bad idea. It just allows you to experiment with clothes and accessories as shown here, with this Khaite puff-sleeve and plaid minidress and baby-blue Mansur Gavriel shoulder bag. 

If you thought you could only wear minidresses and skirts with knee-high boots to show them off, think again. Actually, one of the coolest ways to wear them is with a maxi-length dress and a big jacket, only pulling the hem up to display the boots if you want to. 

Sure, you want your boots to be buttery soft. But what's even better is a buttery-soft pair of leather, knee-high boots that's buttery in color, too. Talk about luxury.

If you weren't sure from her outfit, Sylvie lives in Paris, aka the most fashionable city in the world. And if she's advocating for timeless, black knee-high boots to be worn with trench coats, turtleneck dresses, and sunnies like something Elizabeth James would've worn in Parent Trap, you best follow suit. 

Far less classic and far more daring is the styling concept started by Miu Miu that involves styling high moto boots with teeny-tiny shorts and a long coat. Though similar to the short-skirt-long-jacket phenomenon, this alt takes the look a step further onto the dark side (in the best way possible).  

There was a time when I thought wearing shorts with boots was a fashion faux pas. Not anymore. Rather, it's one of my favorite pairings as the boots always dress up the shorts, which are extremely casual. It's elevated further when the boots have a sharp, pointed toe and a fitted shaft. 

If your outfit's on the more low-key side, might I suggest going loud with the boots, like for instance, something shiny and metallic? I don't know, it's just a suggestion. But after seeing this look from London Fashion Week, I'm convinced it's a stellar idea.