The Hermès Oran Sandal is the Shoe F1 WAGs keep Wearing

There are very few shoes that can claim true fashion immunity. Trends come and go, heel heights rise and fall, logos appear and then vanish. The Hermès Oran sandal sits outside all of that. It is simple, flat, logo free (at first glance, anyway!), and somehow still one of the most recognizable luxury shoes in the world.

Image via @jastookes

In the world of F1 WAG style, it shows up again and again, not as a statement piece, but as the effortless finishing touch that makes an outfit feel considered. Scroll through race weekend photos and you start to notice the pattern. Gold Orans grounding denim looks. Crisp white Orans worn with linen dresses. Even bolder shades like green popping against neutral outfits. The repetition is intentional. The Oran works in the paddock because it is polished without being precious and minimal without being boring.

The sandal itself dates back to 1997, designed by Pierre Hardy, and its design has barely changed since. The graphic H cutout references Hermès in a way that feels architectural rather than logo heavy. It was created as a travel sandal, which explains why it still feels so relevant nearly three decades later. Flat, simple, and refined, it is made for movement.

F1 WAGs gravitate toward it for exactly that reason. It looks elevated in candid photos, works for long days on foot, and pairs seamlessly with the clean silhouettes that dominate paddock style. Alexandra Saint Mleux has worn the Oran repeatedly in black and white, two shades that have become clear favorites across WAG wardrobes.

Alicia Torriani has taken the Oran in a more fashion forward direction, stepping out in green as well as red. Seeing the sandal in a saturated color reinforces why it works so well. The design is so restrained that it can handle bold hues without feeling loud. The shoe becomes the color accent, not the outfit distraction.

Others, including Hannah St. John and Lauren Fitzsimmons, have also worked Orans into race weekend looks, reinforcing the sandal’s status as a shared staple.

That versatility is the secret. The Oran does not compete with an outfit, it completes it. It elevates denim, soft tailoring, dresses, and summer separates with almost no effort. If the price point of Hermès aren’t in your budget, you can check out several gently used pairs of Orans here:

Of course, the price point is not for everyone. The good news is that the appeal of the Oran lies in its shape, which means there are excellent lookalikes. Styles like the Steve Madden Hadyn or Sam Edelman Bay capture the same minimal slide energy at a more accessible price. The key to making them feel luxe is simple styling: clean lines, neutral tones, and quality fabrics.

Whether you invest in the original or opt for a dupe, the message is the same. The Hermès Oran is not a trend. It is a formula. And in F1 WAG fashion, that kind of consistency is everything.

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