Kingston Low Top Sneakers

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Fred Perry
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Kingston Low Top Sneakers

$29 Gilt
$95
Size (UK):
Men's Shoes
UK Men US EU
4.5 5 38
5 5.5 38.5
5.5 6 39
6 6.5 39.5
6.5 7 40
7 7.5 40.5
7.5 8 41
8 8.5 41.5
8.5 9 42
9 9.5 42.5
9.5 10 43
10 10.5 43.5
10.5 11 44
11 11.5 44.5
11.5 12 45
12 12.5 45.5
12.5 13 46
13 13.5 46.5
13.5 14 47
14.5 15 48
  • 7
    Size is sold out To get notified if it becomes available, please select the size and click on "Add to Wait List".
    Men US 7.5
    EU 40.5
  • 9
    Size is sold out To get notified if it becomes available, please select the size and click on "Add to Wait List".
    Men US 9.5
    EU 42.5
  • 10
    Size is sold out To get notified if it becomes available, please select the size and click on "Add to Wait List".
    Men US 10.5
    EU 43.5
  • 11
    Size is sold out To get notified if it becomes available, please select the size and click on "Add to Wait List".
    Men US 11.5
    EU 44.5
  • 12
    Size is sold out To get notified if it becomes available, please select the size and click on "Add to Wait List".
    Men US 12.5
    EU 45.5
Color:
white
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Return Policy: This item has been further reduced from its original Gilt price. It is final sale and non-returnable.
Description
Designer

Leather Kingston low top sneakers

  • Six metal eyelets with lacing and a rounded toe
  • Top-stitch detail
  • Embroidered logo at side
  • Unlined with a padded insole
  • Rubber sole with traction

Brand: Fred Perry

Material: Leather

Origin: Imported

Fred Perry was the proto-preppy punk. Even after winning all four Grand Slam tennis tournaments in the 1930s, the Bournemouth-born son of a cotton spinner was still despised by the tennis establishment. He didn’t care, and went on to give lessons to the likes of Charlie Chaplin and the Marx Brothers. Perry also invented the sweatband and, in 1952, launched his eponymous polo shirt at Wimbledon. It wasn’t long before mods, skinheads, Rude Boys, and other British youth subcultures incorporated his polos — sharp at night and fresh in the morning — into their own looks. (Not that you can't still wear a Fred Perry polo to play a few sets of tennis.) Today the Fred Perry label offers a wide range of clothing, shoes and accessories for men, women, and kids — from sneakers to woven shirts to plaid wool dresses. Every piece features Perry’s instantly recognizable laurel logo, based on an old Wimbledon symbol.