Very informative. I used salsa and jazz shoes for Latin dance for years. Spent so much money. I’m considering taking a tango class. This is in preparation for that. Lol
Thank you for your comment! I would recommend starting tango lessons in flats or even sock feet. It will lead to better balance and foot articulation for dancing in a tango heel. But you don't have to wear heels to dance tango; I have a couple videos related to dancing tango in flats; check them out!
Thx so much, I was actually referring to the one inch minute 3:10 - it is gorgeous and I am considering dancing with a heel shoe again -- but the heel should be as low as possible and still look good 😊
@@Bettinantg Thank you for clarifying! Those particular shoes are a one of a kind from Madame Pivot. They will not make that specific shoe again, but they are making one very similar; the heel is the same height ( 2 1/2 inch) but thinner. The style is "Cherie". Axis Tango also carries these. You can also try Madame Pivot online, but I would contact the site in Italy, not the US. Other brands with a 2 1/2 inch heel I like are Entoces; you can find these at TangoTana shoes, as well as the brand Regina (you can custom order any style with a heel height of "5" which is like the heel on the shoe in my video you like). Regina has some shoes in the Nizza style with this heel that is called a "training shoe" because of the lower heel. I call it the saving your feet shoe! Depending on the dealer they may call this heel height 2 3/4 inch high, but it will be comparable to what you saw in the video. Let me know if this helps!
Hello, and thank you for your question! I would stick with a low 2 1/2 to 3 inch heel because the higher the heel, the more the big toe will be pushed into valgus. You need to try-on a variety of different brands to find the one that best fits your foot. I would also recommend a suede material because it will have more give over your bunion. I hope this helps!
Very informative. I used salsa and jazz shoes for Latin dance for years. Spent so much money. I’m considering taking a tango class. This is in preparation for that. Lol
Thank you for your comment! I would recommend starting tango lessons in flats or even sock feet. It will lead to better balance and foot articulation for dancing in a tango heel. But you don't have to wear heels to dance tango; I have a couple videos related to dancing tango in flats; check them out!
Hi, where did you nuy the one inch heel? Thank you for this video!
Hello, the low block heel with glitter is actually 1 3/4 inch high. The brand is Tangolera, and I bought them from axis tango.com
Thx so much, I was actually referring to the one inch minute 3:10 - it is gorgeous and I am considering dancing with a heel shoe again -- but the heel should be as low as possible and still look good 😊
@@Bettinantg Thank you for clarifying! Those particular shoes are a one of a kind from Madame Pivot. They will not make that specific shoe again, but they are making one very similar; the heel is the same height ( 2 1/2 inch) but thinner. The style is "Cherie". Axis Tango also carries these. You can also try Madame Pivot online, but I would contact the site in Italy, not the US. Other brands with a 2 1/2 inch heel I like are Entoces; you can find these at TangoTana shoes, as well as the brand Regina (you can custom order any style with a heel height of "5" which is like the heel on the shoe in my video you like). Regina has some shoes in the Nizza style with this heel that is called a "training shoe" because of the lower heel. I call it the saving your feet shoe! Depending on the dealer they may call this heel height 2 3/4 inch high, but it will be comparable to what you saw in the video. Let me know if this helps!
@@physiodancernm 💞💞💞 thank you so much!
I have hallux valgus on my right foot, which one do you recommend?
Hello, and thank you for your question! I would stick with a low 2 1/2 to 3 inch heel because the higher the heel, the more the big toe will be pushed into valgus. You need to try-on a variety of different brands to find the one that best fits your foot. I would also recommend a suede material because it will have more give over your bunion. I hope this helps!