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She Traded In Her Oil Industry Job to Design Cowboy Boots for the Office

Growing up in Amarillo, Texas, Lizzy Chesnut Bentley was rarely without her cowboy boots—a pink pair from her grandfather when she was 4 years old.

At Southern Methodist University in Dallas, where Ms. Bentley was president of the student Oil and Gas Club, she developed a reputation for helping students from out of state find their first pair of Texas cowboy boots and wearing her own favorite pair—vintage men’s two-tone ostrich boots she bought for $30—at sorority formals. By the time she was 24, she had amassed a boot collection 50 pairs deep, many of them vintage finds.

The footwear is both “functional and a fashion statement,” Ms. Bentley says. “You can wear them all day. You can put on jeans, and a white T-shirt, and a red pair of cowboy boots, and you have your outfit right there.”

After graduating in 2012 she moved to Houston to work at Halliburton as a financial analyst. The oil business was booming and she loved the city, where everyone she met seemed to be professionally driven. One element of corporate culture irked her, though: She couldn’t find a pair of cowboy boots that worked with her buttoned-up office wardrobe. “I’m wearing heels every day. I’m looking around, all the men are wearing cowboy boots, and I was just jealous,” she says.

Finally, she designed her own—of black buffalo leather with a single strip of white piping up the side—that she tucked into skinny black pants and wore with a blouse and a blazer.

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