Zara Is the Best Place to Find the Trending Boots Taking Over London

At London Fashion Week this week, one of our L.A. editors wore the most amazing pair of buttery cream knee-high heeled boots, and when I asked her where they were from, I was expected a reply like Bottega Veneta or Jimmy Choo. However, it turns out they're £129 from Zara. The retailer's boot section is particularly strong right now, as the trends I saw the most at fashion week are available in plentiful supply.

The three leading boot trends taking over London right now are heeled knee-high boots, lace-up ankle boots, and chunky track sole boots that look like a Chelsea and Wellington hybrid. The thing all of these boots have in common is that they all go with the thing British girls wear the most: dresses. Keep scrolling to shop the trending Zara currently boots taking over London.

1. Knee-High Boots

best-zara-boots-2019-282557-1568799028402-image

(Image credit: SZYMON BRZÓSKA/@THESTYLESTALKERCOM)

Style Notes: Who What Wear's Kristen Nichols pairs her cream knee-high Zara boots with a black dress. They'd also look just as cool tucked into jeans.

2. Lace-Up Boots

best-zara-boots-2019-282557-1568810671035-image

(Image credit: Getty)

Style Notes: Lace-up boots have been really popular this year and look great with pleated skirts and midi dresses.

3. Track Sole Boots

best-zara-boots-2019-282557-1568804102441-image

(Image credit: SZYMON BRZÓSKA/@THESTYLESTALKERCOM)

Style Notes: Jessie's boots are from Prada, but Zara has also got behind the track-sole boot trend in a big way. 

Next up, the seven trends I saw all over London Fashion Week.

Emma Spedding
Freelance Fashion Editor

Emma is a freelance fashion editor with over 15 years experience in industry, having worked at The Telegraph, Grazia and, most recently, British Vogue. Emma was part of the founding team of Who What Wear UK, where she worked for six years as Deputy Editor and then Editor—helping shape the team into what it is today is one of the biggest privileges of her career and she will always see herself as a Who What Wear girl, contributing to both the US and UK sites. Whether she's writing about runway trends or spotlighting emerging brands, she aims to write about fashion in a way that is democratic and doesn't promote over consumption.