Birkenstock Boston clogs should cost you about $160. If you can find a pair,
that is.
Thanks largely to social media, the cork-heeled
staple has become a hot-ticket item in recent months. It is so hot that the
taupe suede leather model, the favorite among users on
TikTok, is sold out in
every size on Birkenstock’s website. Only a few sizes are available in other
suede leather colors. (If you have very tiny feet or very large ones, you may
be in luck.)
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This leaves three options. One: You can wait
patiently for a restock. On the Birkenstock subreddit, a community devoted
entirely to the German footwear brand, users post updates alerting other
community members when certain styles are back in stock online. Blink and they
will be gone again.
In New York City, the Birkenstock store in SoHo was
completely sold out of the taupe suede Bostons on Friday morning and was
awaiting a new shipment. The Williamsburg location had only a few pairs in
limited sizes and widths.
Two: Try your luck at an outside retailer, where
supplies have also appeared to dwindle in recent weeks.
Kristen Seninger, 24, called a local Journeys store
in
San Francisco for five days straight in late August asking if it had a pair
in her size. “I did this every single day, multiple times a day for the past
week and I got them,” she said in a TikTok video filmed in her car after
purchasing the shoes. “The girls in the store basically knew my name. They hated
me, but we secured the goods today,” she added. (In a phone interview, Seninger
said the Journeys employee who sold her the clogs was “excited” she had finally
gotten a pair.)
Or, option three: Pony up some extra cash for resale
sites like eBay and Poshmark, where sellers are listing pairs of Bostons for
marked-up prices, in some cases for more than double their retail value.
Sarah Cowie, an accountant in Michigan, tried and
failed to find a pair of the coveted clogs, specifically a pair in taupe suede,
after seeing them in a video from one of her favorite YouTubers, Gretchen
Geraghty.
“I’m so late to the party that they were all sold
out everywhere,” Cowie, 27, said in a phone call. “I went on Poshmark because I
use Poshmark to sell a lot of my clothes. I found a pair. It was ridiculously
overpriced, but I was like, ‘You know what? I’m going to wear these, so it’s
worth it.’” Cowie said she ultimately paid about $330 for the shoes.
“They’re so controversial now,” she added,
describing the popularity of the shoes on TikTok. “Some people are like, ‘Hey,
they’re really cute,’ and some people think they’re a potato shoe.”
Cowie’s particular pair of Bostons made their way to
Michigan from a Poshmark seller in Nashville, Tennessee, Savannah Huml. (Cowie
left Huml a comment on the platform thanking her for shipping the clogs so
quickly. These comments, known on Poshmark as love notes, are public.) Huml,
27, purchased five pairs of Birkenstock Bostons this summer from a store in
Wisconsin. A longtime fan of the style, she had planned to keep two pairs for
herself and give the rest as gifts to her sisters and a friend.
“I was selling some of my older jeans on Poshmark,
and I was wearing a pair of my old ones and people are more interested in those
than they were in the pants that I was actually selling,” Huml said of the
Bostons she happened to be wearing in a photo she posted on the resale
platform. “That’s when I realized, ‘OK, you know what? That’s fine.’ If
everybody really wants these, I can sell them instead of giving it to them for
Christmas.”
She has since sold three of the pairs, including the
ones she sold to Cowie. One pair fetched $350, Huml said. (Poshmark takes a 20
percent commission on sales over $15.) People on the platform have accused her
of price gouging and have left nasty comments, some of which Huml said she
reported to Poshmark for harassment.
“I looked at some of the people that were kind of
harassing me and they seem to be adult accounts. They weren’t, you know,
14-year-olds,” Huml said. “These seem to be moms, mothers harassing me on the
internet because I have a pair of Boston clogs that their daughter really
wants.”
The rise of the Birkenstock Boston did not happen
overnight. The clogs were spotted in 2021 on the feet of many celebrities,
including Kendall Jenner, Kaia Gerber, and YouTube personality
Emma Chamberlain.
“I didn’t come up with this idea on my own. But I
saw multiple people that I really like their style wearing these,” Chamberlain
said of her purchase in a video last year. “Sometimes I’m a sheep just like
everybody else,” she added.
Sales of Bostons are “up double digits”, according
to a representative for Birkenstock, writing in an email that the company has
seen increased interest in the style over the last several years. “Consumer
demand for Birkenstock has exceeded supply for 10 years now,” the
representative also wrote. The Birkenstock Arizona, the iconic two-strap sandal
that is synonymous with the brand, has also become fashionable in recent years,
from designer pairs to the super comfortable plastic EVA model.
The steady increase in popularity of the clogs on
social media caught Sarah Hoxsie’s eye. Hoxsie, 25, works in digital marketing
and runs a side business reselling clothes on Poshmark from Fairfield,
Connecticut.
“When you see things going viral on TikTok, from a
reseller’s point of view, that’s more of, like, ‘OK, that’s something that I
should keep in stock’ or ‘I should try and sell,’” she said.
Hoxsie purchased six pairs of Bostons at Retail 101,
a discount store that sells new items, as well as items with slight defects and
items that had previously been returned.
“I’ve never in my life felt like a Birkenstock would
be something that is almost like a Supreme item where people buy them and then
resell it for like five times the amount,” Hoxsie said. She said she also
received her share of critical comments, reporting some for harassment on
Mercari, another reselling platform she uses.
“There’s very strong opinions on it. Like, ‘You’re
like stealing from the poor,’ ‘You’re taking everything from these thrift
shops,’” Hoxsie said, using an expletive, of her work as a reseller. “We’re
taking stuff that would go to landfill. But I don’t know. I think people are
just mad when they can’t, like, go to the website and buy what they want.”
Not everyone cares to have the real deal, though.
For some, getting the Boston look at a fraction of the price scratches the same
itch. Sonali Prabhu, 25, got a pair of dupes — internet speak for a cheaper
duplicate of a popular product — from Kohl’s for $50.
“I feel like they just all look the same. And most
of the outfit inspo that I’m seeing for these Birkenstocks are, like, covered.
They’re halfway covered,” Prabhu, a photographer and influencer in Austin,
Texas, said. “It’s just like the little like round part in the front that’s
showing anyways. So I just thought, you know, it’s not even worth getting it
for, like, hundreds of dollars.”
Prabhu shared an affiliate link on social media that
her followers could click to purchase her find. (Purchasing something through
an affiliate link means the link poster, in this case Prabhu, receives a
portion of the sales profit.)
“I have chronic foot pain and can 100,000 percent
tell the difference,” one commenter on Prabhu’s TikTok video wrote, comparing the
copycat pair with the Birkenstocks. “If you aren’t wearing them for support of
orthopedic purposes, the dupes are great.”
The clogs are now sold out in taupe on the Kohl’s
website but are still available in black.
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