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Shoe designer Trevor Houston had a feeling The Row jellies were going to blow up. “We were not sure about even doing that shoe,” remembers Houston, who was head of footwear design for The Row at the time of release. “I was like, ‘This is it. We have to push for this. I just have a feeling about it,’” he says. “I’m a Pisces, I have a weird intuition about things sometimes.”

Now, Houston, who designs shoes for Khaite and Tory Burch, and spent his early career at Marc Jacobs, is bringing this sixth sense to Herbert Levine, the New York brand that was a footwear staple in the 20th century, but has been dormant for almost 50 years. As creative director, Houston is tasked with bringin

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