How to survive in high heels: Sellotape your toes together, says MARIE HELVIN

  • Model, now in her 60s, has learnt how to wear heels more comfortably
  • Offers advice after seeing Emma Thompson and Julia Roberts carrying their Louboutins as they left Golden Globes
  • Recommends leg exercises, rubber grips and cushioned tights

How I felt for the elegant Julia Roberts and Emma Thompson at the Golden Globes ceremony on Sunday. Both arrived in teetering Christian Louboutin heels, and both left in bare feet, clutching their heels in their hands.

I'd hazard a guess that, however glamorous the after-show parties, they couldn't wait to get home and soak their aching, swollen feet.

For the fact is, after a certain age high heels can feel as painful as someone sticking hot pins into the soles of your feet.

Sore point: Emma Thompson ditched her heels at the Golden Globes
Those shoes weren't made for walking: The actress leaves carrying her heels

Sore point: Emma Thompson ditched her heels at the Golden Globes

Julia Roberts stands tall on the red carpet
But also left without her heels on

Julia Roberts stands tall on the red carpet... but also left without her heels on

I should know: I may still make my living as a model, but these days you're more likely to find me in a pair of moccasins or my bare feet than you are in a stiletto.

When I do wear heels, I prefer to only wear them to dinner, where I'll be sitting down most of the time. It's funny really, because in my 20s I practically lived in heels. My young feet just seemed tougher than they are now. I'm in my 60s now and these feet have been around a long time.

For me, my 50s was the decade when my tolerance for heels faded. I'm in good shape and, at 8st 3lb, I'm still the same weight I was in my 30s, but as you get older the weight of your body shifts somehow.

Standing in heels just felt increasingly unnatural, and increasingly uncomfortable - something I'm now unwilling to tolerate.

Beauty is pain: Marie is a fan of heels but hates how sore they can make her feet

Beauty is pain: Marie is a fan of heels but hates how sore they can make her feet

It doesn't help that heels have, year on year, got ever higher.  But don't get me wrong - I think heels make most women look great. We all want to make our legs look the best they possibly can, and there's barely a woman alive whose legs don't look longer and leaner in a high-heeled shoe.

So if you're an older lady like me who wants to stand tall occasionally, how can you wear heels late into the night? Lucky for you, I have some top tips on how to make high heels wearable, gleaned from my years of working in fashion.

1. I've slipped enough times over the years to know the peril of a too-smooth sole, so every time I buy a new pair I take a pair of scissors or a piece of sandpaper to the bottoms to roughen them up. In my catwalk days, I even used to spit on the soles of shoes before I ventured down the runway. Another of my girlfriends uses a particularly tacky hairspray. Anything to give them a bit more grip.

2. I like to give my shoes a test drive once I get home, no matter how silly it feels to be walking round in stilettoes in your pyjamas.

That way you can work out which bits of the shoe rub your feet. Then you stick fabric plasters on the painful bits of your feet, briefly soak them in water before slipping straight back into your shoes and walking around again.

Strutting her stuff: Marie has picked up some tricks on walking in heels from her years as a catwalk model

Strutting her stuff: Marie has picked up some tricks on walking in heels from her years as a catwalk model

This will let your shoes mould and stretch out over the expanded damp plaster area. When you do wear your shoes next, they shouldn't rub.

3. If you've got a long night on heels ahead of you then warm up beforehand - standing on a four-inch heel is like a workout for legs. Hamstring stretches and ankle rotations can help prepare your legs for what's coming. For me, it's pretty much a habit - I do it most of the time while I'm sitting down.

The great news, of course, is that if you're out to dinner you can do some under the table and no one will be any the wiser.

4. Wobble when you try to walk your heels? If you're not wearing open-toed shoes, why not tape your third and fourth toes along from your big toe together?

This will keep foot muscles aligned, which allows the ball of your foot to be much steadier. Try it and see.

5. Spray your feet with deodorant beforehand to stop sweating and increase friction, which will help avoid those dreaded blisters.

Another top tip is to use a nail file to rub away any rough edges inside your shoes and coat them with a thin layer of Vaseline. This will avoid any nasty sharp edges rubbing and causing you pain or blisters later on.

6. If you do develop blisters, then soak your feet for ten minutes in a warm bath with Epsom salts.

Tip: Soaking feet in Epsom salts can toughen up the skin

Tip: Soaking feet in Epsom salts can toughen up the skin

It will toughen up the skin and the salt also acts as an antiseptic, killing bacteria and reducing your chances of developing an infection.

Some people use warm black tea to do the same, but that seems to me a waste of a good drink.

One thing I do if I get home and my feet hurt a bit is to take my hand and place it between each toe to separate them out, particularly if I’ve been wearing heels with a very pointed toe.

It seems to relax them. I’m also a fan of Voltorol, an anti-inflammatory gel, to soothe aches and pains.

7. Buy rubber grips to stick on the soles of your shoes, even your fanciest ones. They cost very little - I buy them in bulk online, although you can get a cobbler to fit them - and I find that sticking one to the widest part of my shoe helps give me more stability.

Christian Louboutin would be horrified if he knew, of course, as he is known for his stylish red soles. But they're on every single shoe I own.

8. Always find your shoes feel tight by the end of the evening? Use a man's shoe tree to stretch them out. This should provide a little extra wriggle room.

9. Don't be scared of cushioning. The padding on the skin of your feet gets thinner with age, which is why the older you get, the less tolerant your feet are to wearing heels. I use stick-in foot cushions to give extra support, and also to stop my foot from sliding forward in your shoes.

And while they're not exactly sexy, cushioned tights can help, too. Marks & Spencer do a decent range. I also find shoes with a platform sole much more comfortable than thin ones.

10. You need to spend time finding the right heels for you - see it as a project. Never ever buy shoes on the spur of the moment, because they'll rarely be right once you get them home.

I always go shoe shopping in the afternoon, when I've been on my feet for a few hours and they've swollen a little. That way you won't find that your shoes get tighter as the day goes on.

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