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HIGH HEELS - NEVER AGAIN A WOBBLY GAME

Elegant, sexy, and painful! This is the best way to describe the popular high heels. Bad gait and sore feet should be yesterday's problems. Because two different methods should help us to determine the heel height individually tailored for each woman.

High heels - a blessing and a nightmare at the same time!
Who doesn't love her No matter whether man or woman, everyone is enthusiastic about them? High heels make the wearer look taller, the gait more graceful, elegant and contribute to better posture, for more information on heels click here https://shopecs.com/women/block-heels. An upright gait makes the world of women more attractive and more self-confident. Unfortunately, these positive properties only start from a heel height of 7 cm and up. High heels may look sexy, but walking is anything but sexy for the wearer. Sore, swollen feet that try to hold on to the wobbly stilts as well as possible.

Allegedly there is a method for this that is supposed to determine the optimal heel height of every woman by simply measuring the feet. An orthopedic surgeon is convinced that every woman has a personal high heel height that is most comfortable for her. All you have to do is draw an imaginary line from the tip of your foot over the ball of the foot and measure the distance to the heel. This difference (between the heel and this line) should result in the optimal height.

You can easily measure that at home. Simply sit barefoot on the floor, press your foot loosely against a wall until the ball of the foot touches the wall. Now measure the distance between the heel and the wall and your individually adjusted heel height is ready.

But there is another way to find the “most comfortable” high heel height. British physicists have their own formula for this.

h = Q (12 + 3s / 8)

The formula looks a bit complicated and confusing at first glance, but after a brief explanation, it makes a lot more sense.

'H' is the height of the heel in cm and 's' is the shoe size in British measurements. 'Q' is a “socio-economic” factor.

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