These are the most extreme high-heels you can imagine. Basically, keeping the foot in a ballet on-pointe position the entire time. Of course, here there are also some different variations. To increase the walking difficulty even more, one could use ballet heels, that don’t even have heels. Of course, this requires a bit of a different positioning of the foot. A fantastic use of this within a story, which I sadly haven’t seen frequently, is when a person wants to cosplay / dress up as someone who’s actually quite a bit taller. They use a kind of fixed sock, that keeps their feet in that position, and then wear normal boots over that, to simulate a taller body.
Shoes of the Future by Bazzoing450k
This is an old story from the author Bazzoing450k, that I managed to find in an archive of sticky-site.com. The story of how Erica found some very interesting shoes. Shoes of the Future “These are the shoes of the future.” Said the announcer. The advert showed a young woman parading up and down a catwalk. She was wearing a red bikini and seemed to be shuffling somewhat. The camera zoomed in to a close-up of her feet. One would have expected her to be wearing red high heels of some description but she wasn’t. On her feet were two fairly shapeless silver/white boxes and she was having trouble walking in them. “They don’t look much now.” Said the announcer excitedly “But with a press of a remote control…” The boxes shimmered and changed even as the woman walked. The position of her legs changed and she got taller as the boxes morphed into beautiful red mules with a four-inch heel. “The Multi-shoe 4000 can be any sort of shoe or boot you want thanks to its intelligent reactive plastic material.” Gushed the announcer as the woman’s shoes changed many times in shape and colour. Finally the advert was over and the magic faded very quickly as the price appeared on the screen: $7899. ...