zetsubousensei said in forum #419891:
I raise that not all heels are high, or at the very least the tags are a mess
I'll certainly agree with you there. As things currently stand--and, I admit, I really should have looked into before creating the BUR--currently, of the various types and designs of heels listed on the high heels wiki page, only stiletto heels, pumps, and high heel boots imply high heels.
The high heels wiki page lists a total of 12 "design" tags, and, again, only 2 of those "designs" currently carry the implication. High-heels boots are listed as a subtype, not a style; the other 3 "subtypes" also lack the implication, including high-heel sandals, high-heel slides, and high-heel sneakers, all of which should, I hope fairly obviously, carry the implication.
I should have probably made a BUR, or rather a series of BURs, to add the implication (style_of_heel) -> high_heels, uniformly, for every tag that is a style of high heel, which is to say, all the tags named with the convention something_heels, including block heels, wedge heels, and, perhaps controversially, heel-less heels and low_block_heels.
If forum #413104 goes through it will only get messier
That particular proposal has been defeated. However, the high-heels implication is actually currently being discussed for high-heel sandals, at topic #34864; but the same person that created the BUR to deprecate platform heels has derailed the implication discussion and it is now an argument about deprecating the high heel sandals tag. For now, though, I think we should proceed as though the tags will continue to exist; I do not think the deprectaion BURs are likely to go through.
Regarding the "flat" ones, I think that is the most pressing issue here.
I agree. I think that we should establish a clear cut-off between what is a flat-soled shoe, and what is a high heel.
The definition of high heels as we currently have it states:
from high heels wiki:
Footwear which raises the heels of the wearer's feet significantly higher than the toes.
This definition is good, in my opinion. It is a single line, very short and clear: Any shoe that has the heel much higher than the toe, is a high heel. Coming back to the comment made by @trapster77, the definition as it currently stands, explicitly includes heel-less heels as high_heels; the definition only requires that the wearer's heel rest significantly above their toe, not that the shoe have any structural heel. Indeed it makes no specific requirements of any part of the shoe, leaving that to the various style tags. I therefore see no problem with them carrying the implication. They fit the definition as it currently exists.
The definition does contain some ambiguity, though, in the word "significantly". I believe that a lower bound, a cut-off, could be helpful--if we can agree on such a thing. I propose that a new line be added to the wiki, below the definition line:
The heel of the foot should rest noticeably higher than the toes for this tag to apply; in other words, the sole should arch, and not lie flat. As a rule of thumb, apply the tag if the heel looks like it is at least one inch, or 3 centimeters, above the toe.
This gives a lower bound that I think is quite reasonable, ensuring that any post with the tag should have at least a noticeable heel, but allowing for even relatively low shoes to be included. I understand that 1 inch / 3 cm might be a bit short for some people to consider a high heel, but in my own opinion, at 3cm, the sole is pretty clearly no longer flat, and i just doesn't make sense to have a tag for intermediate shoes. Lots of pumps, for instance, have short heels like this, but I reckon it still makes the most sense to classify pumps as a subset of high heels.
I think we can agree these are strappy but not high heels
I actually don't agree that all of these are not high heels. post #10571177 post #6231735 post #7493293 I would all classify as low block heels, which are high heels (at least by my definition! note that, there is room under the current definition to argue that they are not "significant" enough to qualify as high heels; I believe they are high heels because the raise at the heel is immediately noticeable. They all look to raise about 1 inch or sightly more, to my eyes.)
I do however agree that post #672811 post #9027721 post #9883075 are all flat shoes. In particular, I think that they should have their heel-related tags removed (post #672811 already has both platform heels and platform shoes; the inappropriate tag should simply be removed; no harm done, as the correct tag already exists and is applied.)
Strappy footwear would have been a good rename, but our footwear tags are being killed for more clarity like boots, sandals, shoes, ect.
I think that more specificity and clarity is good. I believe the tag should remain Strappy heels, and we should exclude flat-soled footwear. A new tag for strappy shoes could be created, and even could be linked on the wiki page as an alternative tag, ie, not to be confused with strappy shoes, which are similar to strappy heels but have a flat sole. in the fist few pages of strappy_heels -high_heels, there are at least a few examples that would fit, post #10844902, post #10411951, post #9357235, maybe post #9184196?
There's also a few flat-soled yet strappy sandals in the mix, post #9732766 should probably be tagged gladiator sandals, but for (NSFW) post #9486410, that tag isn't appropriate. however, the sandals don't look particularly strappy to me. They just look like ordinary sandals, maybe with an ankle_strap.
However populating a new tag (or tags) will be a lot of work, mostly because there are a whole ton of images in strappy_heels -high_heels which should have the high_heels tag. The vast majority, in fact; a cursory glance at the first few pages indicates the ratio is on the order of 50:1. I think this is because most uploaders likely already assume the tag carries the implication, and don't bother to check; this is the problem I aimed to address with the initial BUR; someone searching for high_heels shouldn't be missing out on... at least a thousand posts that are only tagged as strappy heels.
I feel strongly about [...] making sure there is a way to [...] denote when the strap is attached to the footwear regardless of heel elevation.
Just due to the amount of work to populate the new tag--and given that, as the guy who brought it up, I'm somewhat liable to find myself doing that work--I'd rather not create new tags; but I can be convinced if folks reckon there is a demand for them. For now, I propose that flat-soled shoes be re-tagged with ankle strap if they don't already have it, an appropriate shoe tag, if they don't already have it, and have strappy heels removed. I further propose that the definition of ankle strap be amended to explicitly state that it is an ankle strap as part of a shoe. the definition as it stands is already at least suggestive of this, if not outright stating it; and, I see it as a perfect opportunity to make the tag meaningfully distinct and useful, compared to the horribly overlapping ankleband, which can be amended to clarify that it refers to a free-floating band around the ankle in the vein of a wristband, which, again, is implied but not explicitly stated in the definition of that tag. Now those are messy tags. Two birds with one stone, maybe? Or, maybe more work for me-- ankle_strap -shoes is quite sizable, and would need to be cleaned up. Frankly I probably shouldn't have opened this can of worms--making a new tag might be much easier than trying to clean up and redefine two messy old ones...
If nobody has objections by the next time I'm around, I'll start by amending the wiki page of strappy_heels to make it clear that it explicitly excludes flat-soled footwear; but I won't start on that right away. I also do plan to make BURs to add the implication for all of the "heel style" tags, although of course I won't start on that until the fate of strappy heels has been decided.
Apologies for not being clear
Thank you for your detailed and well-constructed response. It has also helped me better express my thoughts about the tag and led to me doing more looking in to the state of the tag. I find that it is easy for a message I write to be unclear or come off poorly, and I think some of my emphasis in particular in my initial response came off quite poorly, reading it back now. Thank you, then, for being accommodating and civil, and apologies for anything that came across as snide or rude. I do try to ensure that my posts are polite, but I am not a very good writer, so my posts often end up very imperfect in this regard--not to mention, very long.