Maison Margiela’s Tabi Boots: The Most Controversial Shoe in Fashion Finds Its Way Into Beauty

Last weekend, while riding the subway, I accidentally became a walking spectacle. Not because I was underdressed, overdressed, or carrying a live ferret in a tote bag but because of my shoes.

2025-09-27 06:13:15 - Felicia Elohim

A group of women across the aisle pointed, whispered, and then laughed. And I knew instinctively that it wasn’t my jacket, or my hair, or even my “it’s-Saturday-I’m-tired” face they were reacting to. No, it was my feet.

I was wearing a pair of Maison Margiela Tabi boots chestnut brown, knee-high, with a history as storied as their silhouette. Once belonging to writer Laura Reilly and purchased at a Liana Satenstein closet sale, they weren’t just boots. They were a conversation starter, a cultural Rorschach test. People either love them, loathe them, or quietly obsess over them while pretending to be indifferent.

The Polarizing Legacy of the Tabi

Since their debut on the Paris runway in 1988, Margiela’s split-toe Tabis have stirred more emotional responses than most politicians. To some, they’re sculptural genius, an ode to Japanese footwear and a rejection of cookie-cutter trends. To others, they look like hooves, a shoe that makes you resemble a chic centaur or a particularly stylish farmhand.

But here’s the twist: Tabis are no longer confined to footwear. They’ve crossed into beauty.

From Runway to Vanity Table

In a move that only Margiela could pull off, the Tabi has been reimagined beyond leather and stitching. Nail artists have recreated the split-toe silhouette in manicures. Perfume collectors chase down Maison Margiela’s Replica scents packaged with the same rebellious spirit. The brand has even inspired eye looks yes, literal eyeshadow designed to mimic that sharp, bisected edge.

It’s proof that the Tabi is no longer just a shoe. It’s a full-fledged aesthetic, a philosophy that dares you to embrace discomfort, confrontation, and curiosity all at once.

Why We Can’t Look Away

The fascination with Tabis isn’t really about the shoes themselves, it's about what they symbolize. They force us to question why beauty and fashion must always conform. Why should a boot be smooth and rounded? Why should a nail be a perfect oval? Why should perfume packaging be safe and predictable?

Margiela’s Tabi laughs in the face of those rules. And in doing so, it has carved out an identity that is impossible to ignore.

So, whether you think they’re hideous, brilliant, or both, one thing is certain: Tabis make you feel something. And in a world of endless beige sneakers and safe little ballet flats, that might be the most beautiful thing of all.

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