Jessica Simpson’s New Cowboy Boots
Monday, August 25th, 2008Jessica Simpson and Her Cowboy Boots
Jessica Simpson has gone country! Well at least her taste in music and her taste in boots have. It makes sense that Jessica is becoming a country music singer. She is from Dallas, Texas, she possesses that wonderful southern accent, and she does make a pair of cowboy boots look pretty darn good.
Jessica Simpson Gives Top 40 the Boot!
Jessica has always been known as a pop singer, but her new album that comes out in early September, titled “Do You Know,” is her first venture into the world of country music stardom. Jessica appears on the cover of her new album donning a white dress and a pair of cowboy boots. We have been wondering what brand those boots are since we saw that picture. Are they Ariat, Tony Lama, Lucchese, or perhaps even Justin?
Jessica Simpson’s Boots are made for Walking
Because of her new trek into country music, Jessica has been seen wearing cowboy boots a lot lately. However, this is not her first rodeo with cowboy boots. Back in 2005, Jessica played the infamous Daisy Duke in the movie “The Dukes of Hazzard.” She most definitely got used to wearing boots during that movie. Although it probably was her “These Boots are Made for Walking” video that put her cowboy-boot wearin’ on the map. After that video, the demand for Jessica’s red cowboy boots was so high that she ended up carrying them in her own Jessica Simpson shoe line.
Jessica Simpson’s Red Boots
Now we may not carry Jessica Simpson’s red boots at Allens, but we do carry one of the most extensive selections of women’s cowboy boots this side of Hazzard County. And if it is red cowboy boots you want, than look no further than the Justin Scarlet Vintage boot or the Charlie 1 Horse Red Calf Western boot. Whatever mood that Jessica and her boots have put you in, we have got you covered.
Ariat boots began in 1990, when co-founders Beth Cross and Pam Parker decided that it was time to create a new type of boot for riders. After designing a new western boot that was no where near the traditional stiff 