Footwear Stocks List

Footwear Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 22 NKE They Spent $20 Million Updating Their Oregon Home. Now It’s for Sale.
Nov 21 NKE NIKE, Inc. Announces Second Quarter Fiscal 2025 Earnings and Conference Call
Nov 21 NKE JD Sports Says Weather, Election and Jordan Pullback Impacted Q3 Sales, But Retailer Gained US Market Share
Nov 21 NKE NIKE's Premium P/S Valuation: Sign of Growth or Time to Cash Out?
Nov 21 SCVL Shoe Carnival Q3: EPS Win But Sales Slip Amid Calendar Shifts And Weather Woes
Nov 21 SCVL A Warm Fall and Hurricanes Hurt Shoe Carnival Sales in Q3
Nov 21 SCVL Shoe Carnival lowers sales guidance as Q3 sales disrupted by weather
Nov 21 NKE Bill Ackman Is Piling Into Nike Stock: 3 Things Investors Need to Know
Nov 21 SCVL Shoe Carnival (SCVL) Tops Q3 Earnings Estimates
Nov 21 CROX Crocs taps legendary shoe designer to lead creative innovation
Nov 21 SCVL Shoe Carnival (NASDAQ:SCVL) Misses Q3 Sales Targets
Nov 21 SCVL Shoe Carnival: Fiscal Q3 Earnings Snapshot
Nov 21 SCVL Shoe Carnival Non-GAAP EPS of $0.71 beats by $0.05, revenue of $306.9M misses by $9.33M
Nov 21 SCVL Shoe Carnival Reports Third Quarter Fiscal 2024 Results
Nov 21 NKE These Are the 5 Worst-Performing Stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average With 2024 Almost Over
Nov 21 CROX 3 Growth Stocks Down 40% to Buy Right Now
Nov 21 NKE 2 Dow Jones Stocks Billionaires Are Buying Hand Over Fist
Nov 21 SCVL Earnings Scheduled For November 21, 2024
Nov 20 BIRD Allbirds to Participate in Upcoming Investor Conference
Nov 20 SCVL Insights into Shoe Carnival's Upcoming Earnings
Footwear

Footwear refers to garments worn on the feet, which originally serves to purpose of protection against adversities of the environment, usually regarding ground textures and temperature. Footwear in the manner of shoes therefore primarily serves the purpose to ease the locomotion and prevent injuries. Secondly footwear can also be used for fashion and adornment as well as to indicate the status or rank of the person within a social structure.
Socks and other hosiery are typically worn additionally between the feet and other footwear for further comfort and relief.
Cultures have different customs regarding footwear. These include not using any in some situations, usually bearing a symbolic meaning. This can however also be imposed on specific individuals to place them at a practical disadvantage against shod people, if they are excluded from having footwear available or are prohibited from using any. This usually takes place in situations of captivity, such as imprisonment or slavery, where the groups are among other things distinctly divided by whether or whether not footwear is being worn. In these cases the use of footwear categorically indicates the exercise of power as against being devoid of footwear, evidently indicating inferiority.

Footwear has been in use since the earliest human history, archeological finds of complete shoes date back to the copper age (ca. 5.000 BCE). Some ancient civilizations, such as Egypt and Greece however saw no practical need for footwear due to convenient climatic and landscape situations and used shoes primarily as ornaments and insignia of power.
The Romans saw clothing and footwear as unmistakable signs of power and status in society, and most Romans wore footwear, while slaves and peasants remained barefoot. The Middle Ages saw the rise of high-heeled shoes, also associated with power, and the desire to look larger than life, and artwork from that period often depicts bare feet as a symbol of poverty. Depictions of captives such as prisoners or slaves from the same period well into the 18th century show the individuals barefooted almost exclusively, at this contrasting the prevailing partakers of the scene. Officials like prosecutors, judges but also slave owners or passive bystanders were usually portrayed wearing shoes.
In some cultures, people remove their shoes before entering a home. Bare feet are also seen as a sign of humility and respect, and adherents of many religions worship or mourn while barefoot. Some religious communities explicitly require people to remove shoes before they enter holy buildings, such as temples.
In several cultures people remove their shoes as a sign of respect towards someone of higher standing. In a similar context deliberately forcing other people to go barefoot while being shod oneself has been used to clearly showcase and convey one's superiority within a setting of power disparity.
Practitioners of the craft of shoemaking are called shoemakers, cobblers, or cordwainers.

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