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I Wore the Viral Marc Jacobs Doll Shoes Around New York—Here’s My Honest Review (and a Million Pics)

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I want to be a Marc Jacobs doll—literally. The designer has been sending models down the runway in blazers and skirts with extreme puffed-up proportions, paired with cartoonish shoes that look as though they were peeled off a Barbie’s foot and then supersized. Their eyes are covered in eye shadow so sparkly it reflects like wax, and their eyelashes are so spindly they appear painted on. In the photos, each model stands completely straight, arms and legs firmly planted, as though waiting to be cut out from a magazine and dressed in paper clothing. This look appeared on the spring and fall 2024 runways and returned for spring 2025.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Launchmetrics)

Marc Jacobs Doll Shoes Runway

(Image credit: Courtesy of Launchmetrics)

I often see something on the runway and covet it instantly, but it’s less about becoming the woman the designer is creating for and more about finding ways to make beautiful things work within the wardrobe I already own. These Marc Jacobs shows were different. I wanted to become the doll. I wanted to carry a bag so big it looks like Photoshop. I wanted to button up a blazer with buttons larger than the size of my hand. I wanted to stomp around the city in funny doll shoes.

Marc Jacobs Doll Shoes Runway

(Image credit: Courtesy of Launchmetrics)

Marc Jacobs Doll Shoes Runway

(Image credit: Courtesy of Launchmetrics)

Thankfully, the last thing became a reality when the brand commercialized and released the aptly named Doll Pump. The shoes first appeared on the fall 2024 runway. It’s a Mary Jane style with exaggerated, ridiculous proportions, immediately reminiscent of Minnie Mouse and Betty Boop. Before I truly understood the power of a good shoe, these were what my childhood doodles of footwear looked like. Marc Jacobs’s take also features a huge gold statement-buckle closure, which feels extremely whimsical—and correct.

When I walked into the Marc Jacobs store to purchase a pair, the sales associate told me she had recently bought some for herself. The size 40 I purchased was the last pair available. “I was surprised people weren’t buying them as much when we got them in a couple of months ago,” she said. “But now we’ve been seeing lots of girls come in and get them ahead of the fall.” I said everyone wants to be a doll this fall and she nodded. “I guess so!”

Marc Jacobs doll pumps selfie

Decided to go full Minnie Mouse for my first look in the doll pumps with a black mini Miu Miu dress covered in red flowers.

Marc Jacobs doll pumps selfie

The shoes simply call for a leg pop at all times.

But genuinely after a summer with no song of the summer, just one year after the messy chaotic fun that was Brat summer, I’m feeling the need to dissociate. Everyone I know feels the same. I want to dress like a doll to feel the stillness of being inanimate. I wish to be locked away in a toy chest somewhere, blithely unaware of what’s happening outside of it.

And yet, that’s impossible. So I settle for dressing like a doll instead, with silly little doll pumps that bring joy not by drowning out everything going on in the world right now but by giving me something to laugh at every time I look at my feet. The tips are a little pointed, and I can’t help but imagine my younger self drawing the sharpest point on a piece of paper with a pencil as I sketch out the top of a shoe in the margins of my english class notes.

marc jacobs doll pump shoe selfie

But what I love most about the doll pumps is how they look good with…everything? Including this top I recently thrifted and my favorite silk Roberto Cavalli skirt.

marc jacobs doll pump shoe selfie

The side profile of the heel is so fun I kept finding myself doing a turn out.

marc jacobs doll pump shoe selfie

Once again…the doll pumps demand a hip pop.

Fun shoes always make me giggle and kick my feet; but not all of them do so comfortably. Thankfully, the Marc Jacobs doll pumps bring a sense of both mental and physical euphoria. They don’t cause blisters. They don’t feel tight on my toes. They don’t even feel like heels at all. I think it’s the exaggerated proportions that allow for more give, versus the slim, slinky and strappy silhouette of a standard heel, which often make my feet feel vacuum sealed. Instead the doll pumps made me feel free. I used to pity Minnie Mouse, thinking she was stuck in a pair of heels forever. But now I understand why she always looked so happy. The weight of being a woman is at least somewhat alleviated if you’re in cartoon pumps that are easy to strut in.