Primark’s ‘standout’ £22 shoes look ‘just like’ £1,250 designer pair

The Primark shoes bear a striking resemblance to a much more expensive pair from designer René Caovilla

Primark is currently selling a pair of shoes that are remarkably similar to a more expensive counterpart. The high street giant, renowned for its budget-friendly fashion and homeware, may have just launched a new latest crowd-pleaser.

The Spiral Diamante Heeled Sandals from Primark bear a striking resemblance to a style by luxury brand René Caovilla but at a fraction of the price. Shoppers can bag the Primark version for £22, while the designer alternative retails at £1,250 online.

Both pairs feature matching soles and spiral straps, which are decorated with sparkling diamantes. They both also have two straps over the front of the foot.

However, there are some differences between the two. The designer shoes feature black diamantes, while Primark’s are silver. The more expensive shoes also feature a higher heel.

Primark describes the shoes as “spiral diamante sandals with stiletto heel and rounded toe.” They are available in cream or black.

The full Primark description reads: “Step into sparkle with these black spiral diamante heeled sandals. The slim stiletto heel and round toe create a sleek base, while two slim front straps shimmer with hotfix rhinestones.

“The standout spiral ankle strap wraps elegantly around your leg, covered in sparkling crystals for a bold, eye-catching look. With no buckle closure, the coiling strap offers a unique fit and style. Perfect for adding drama to your evening outfit, these sandals bring a dazzling finish that’s sure to turn heads.”

The designer description states: “For a flirtatious finishing touch to your favourite after-dark ensemble, look no further than the Cleo sandals from René Caovilla. Adorned with delicate embellishments, this glittering pair guarantees to catch the light with every step – ensuring you sparkle and gleam from dusk ‘til dawn.”

Primark’s Spiral Diamante Heeled Sandalsretail for £10, while the René Caovilla Black Embellished Cleo Sandals 105 come in at £1,250. This means shoppers could save £1,228 by opting for the cheaper alternative.

Shoppers can now get their hands on the Primark shoes, in black or cream, in stores. Shoppers can check stock levels at their closest store here.

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Beatles star’s 3-word quip as sister was dragged on stage by stampeding fans

John Lennon’s sister has opened up on what would have been the Beatles star’s 85th birthday about the childhood experiences that shaped him into a global icon

Staff at the Strawberry Field children’s home in the 1950s were used to seeing a skinny lad sitting in a tree in their grounds. The boy who climbed their fence to escape a troubled home life was John Lennon – who would have been 85 today (October 9) – whose experience inspired him to write one of the best-known songs of all time.

Now, as the visitor attraction prepares to mark a major milestone in its history, Lennon’s sister Julia Baird is keen to explain why Strawberry Field’s success – and her brother’s legacy – really is forever. “This place has been a part of my life for a very long time and it meant a lot to John too,” Honorary President Julia, now 78, tells The Mirror.

“He had a rough childhood and to come into these grounds was his escape. Without really knowing it, he was another damaged child who was being taken care of here.”

Given to The Salvation Army in 1934, Strawberry Field opened two years later – 90 years ago next year – offering refuge for some of Liverpool’s most vulnerable children. Today it houses an exhibition tracing Lennon’s life and career – its star attraction being the world-famous piano on which he wrote and recorded Imagine .

It also operates a Steps to Work programme, providing training, skills and work placements for young adults with learning difficulties, or other barriers to employment. Beatles fans from across the globe still make pilgrimages to Strawberry Field in south Liverpool, but Julia says of the song that’s its namesake: “I get fed up with hearing it!

“My favourite track of John’s is actually Watching the Wheels. It reminds me of him lying on the bed, watching telly with Sean running around – and ignoring the pressure he was under to get back into the music industry. I love that. I saw an interview he did once and he was asked if he would consider writing his autobiography ‘Oh no,’ he sneered. ’I’d never do anything like that, what a stupid thing to do’.

“But I was laughing my head off. I thought ‘you’re writing it all the time through your songs.’ Strawberry Field is his psychoanalytical poem.”

Six-and-a-half years older than John, as a lad he had only sporadic contact with his seaman father, Alfred, and was raised mainly by one of his mum’s sisters, Mimi, in a house only yards away from Strawberry Field. His mum also had two daughters in a new relationship – Julia and her younger sister Jackie – but remained close to John, seeing him regularly.

She taught him to play the banjo and introduced him to Elvis Presley – dancing around the kitchen to the music. “Our mum was very arty, very creative and musical,” says Julia, who now lives in Cheshire. “She played the piano accordion and loved Judy Garland and Edith Piaf.

“And she was an excellent mother when she was given the chance; my father made sure she had that chance.”

Julia recalls John being an ‘awkward’ teen with a ‘chip on his shoulder,’ saying:“There he’d be, walking down the road with his guitar and his quiff, a cocky kid. “I was chatting to a former neighbour once and he said he remembered all the boys playing football in the street. John came along and kicked the ball into infinity so they all set on him and beat him up!

“People ask me what it was like to be John Lennon’s sister, but I didn’t know any different; he was just my older brother.”

When their mum was killed in a car accident in July 1958, John was just 17. “People say it was terrible for John and it was, but it was a lot worse for Jackie. She was only eight years old,” says Julia. “John’s childhood was far from plain sailing, but the result of that was John, the world icon. It made him the genius he was.”

Julia had a ringside seat when global fame hit her brother, together with Paul, George and Ringo, in the wake of The Beatles’ first single, Love Me Do, in 1962.

“There was no escaping it. I’d help open Beatles fan letters – some inviting them to leave their wives and girlfriends – and because fans kindly put in stamped addressed envelopes we’d reply. We’d pretend and say ‘we’ll meet you at the station?’” she says. “It was a full time job!”

Recalling a 1964 concert in London – part of a sold-out 16 night run – where, to John’s dismay, she and Jackie insisted on moving from a spot backstage out front, she says: “The front few rows were relatively empty and we thought we’d get a good view. He told us again and again to stay put but we pestered and he relented in the end.

“But then suddenly the opening bars for She Loves You started, the curtain went up and before the second bar everyone from the back was at the front – there was a huge surge. It was quite threatening, like a stampede. So John is singing and also going ‘get the girls, get the girls’; we were hauled on our stomachs back over the side of the stage. He just looked and said, ‘told you so’.”

Like most brothers, John could be embarrassing. “This was later during the anti-war protests – when he was in a bed or in a bag; it was awful,” says Julia. “I was married by then and living in Ireland and my in-laws said, ‘don’t worry love, we’ll keep it quiet that you’re related to him’.

“I mentioned it one day on the phone to John. I said, ‘you were in the ivory tower. We were dealing with it on the street’. He just said ‘sorry about that’.” John was murdered in 1980 in New York by Mark Chapman, who remains in prison.

Retired teacher Julia, who has three grandchildren, is convinced if he was alive today, her brother would be speaking out about global issues, including war and famine. “I can’t see him being able to keep out of it or keep quiet about what’s happening across the world. Life had been very unfair to him – as it is to so many people – and he hated injustice so whatever the cause he’d be saying ‘that’s not fair – we need to do something’,” she says.

Of his music, had he lived, she adds: “Maybe he’d have graduated to jazz. I don’t see him retiring at all. He’d be writing books although I worry that his eyesight might have caused him trouble using a computer. And I do wonder what he would look like now. I haven’t seen him for so long, and yet because he’s John Lennon I see him all the time. I wonder if he’d still have hair!”

But she believes John’s message and music are as relevant today as ever. “The Beatles were part of a cultural shift. They were an instrument for change – that birth of the teenager where young people no longer had to accept they’d simply leave school, get engaged, get married, have babies or work in an office,” she says. “That sort of change which challenges the norm still resonates.”

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She believes he would have celebrated his birthday, adding: “Mum always made a big thing of birthdays, even when we were small, always made it a big celebration. John would have known that that was the order of the day.”

At Strawberry Field, Julia is surrounded by reminders of John, from engraved song lyrics to the famous red-painted entrance gates. But she has one very special keepsake that she treasures.

‘I’m very proud to be a dementia football mascot’

Handout Raymond James wearing a Chelsea Football Club coat and a football scarfHandout

“I feel very proud,” says Raymond James, as he prepares to walk on to the pitch at Wembley as a footballer’s mascot.

Mr James, from Fulham, is one of 22 people living with dementia who will walk out with the England and Wales team before their “Alzheimer’s Society International” friendly on Thursday evening.

Football fans were nominated from across England and Wales to represent the many different faces of dementia in the UK.

Mr James was given the news he was being invited to Wembley in a video call from Chelsea captain Reece James.

Reflecting on the moment, he says: “I couldn’t believe it at first.

“Chelsea is my team, from the time I came to this country. I like Fulham as well. I like all the teams around me. Queens Park Rangers, I like to see them do well. But Chelsea is the one – I’ve got the shirts and everything.”

Chris Slegg/BBC Cynthia and Raymond James sat on a bench wearing coats.Chris Slegg/BBC

Mr James said it was his wife that recognised he was struggling with his memory.

“I never thought or knew that I had Alzheimer’s,” he said. “My wife said: ‘You’re not the same person, something’s wrong. I’m making an appointment to see the doctor’.”

Mr James said the doctor he visited told him that he was getting Alzheimer’s and prescribed him some tablets.

‘Cruel disease’

Cynthia James said being a mascot at Wembley would mean “the world” to her husband.

“He had to keep it a secret initially,” she said, adding that he had since told “everybody who would listen”.

She added that she would record her husband’s appearance so that he could watch it as many times as he wanted.

“Alzheimer’s, although it’s a progressive disease, it doesn’t mean that once you’ve been diagnosed, it’s the end of the world,” she said.

“You can still have a good life – that’s what we try for him.

“I try to keep him as independent as possible, but he’s deteriorating and I can see that every day. It’s sad to watch.

“I think dementia and Alzheimer’s is a cruel disease, it just takes the person you love away, a bit at a time.

Matt Hughes-Short in a grey suit with a blue shirt. He is standing in a park.

Matt Hughes-Short, from Alzheimer’s Society, said the match at Wembley would be “incredible” for the mascots walking out with the players.

“Football has such a wonderful power to connect people,” he said. “A love of football can last your entire life.

“And I think for the mascots who are walking out, not only is it going to be so impactful for them and their families, but I think it’s also going to send a real message about dementia.

“There are 90,000 people living with dementia in London, but there are almost one million people in the UK. It’s the UK’s biggest killer. One in three people born today will be diagnosed with the condition.

Previous Alzheimer’s Society Internationals were marked by the removal of names on the back of players’ shirts when they returned to the pitch after half-time, drawing attention to memory loss, one of the symptoms most commonly associated with dementia.

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Germany repeals little-used fast track citizenship scheme

Germany has ended a fast-track programme that let highly qualified foreigners apply for citizenship after three years of residence instead of the standard five.

The Bundestag, the German parliament, voted down the measure on Wednesday, according to Germany’s ARD public broadcaster.

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The programme had only been in place since 2024 and was used by just a few hundred applicants, but it was politically unpopular despite Germany’s declining population.

The vote on Tuesday made good on an election promise from Chancellor Friedrich Merz earlier this year that his centre-right Christian Democratic Union would repeal the fast-track programme.

Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said the measure needed to go because it had devalued German citizenship.

“The German passport must be available as recognition for successful integration and not as an incentive for illegal migration,” Dobrindt told reporters on Tuesday.

The repeal was supported by parties like the far-right AfD, the largest opposition party in the Bundestag.

The AfD is well-known for its anti-immigration stance and has previously called for the “mass deportation” of immigrants.

The party was one of the biggest winners in the federal election in February, doubling its number of seats in parliament compared to the last election in 2021.

Ferat Kocak from The Left party told reporters that the German government was making “AfD’s hatred socially acceptable”, according to ARD.

A survey by ARD Capital Studio in July found that just 573 people in Berlin had applied for the fast-track citizenship since 2024, representing just 1.02 percent of all citizenship applications.

Berlin was followed by 78 people in Bavaria and 16 people in Baden-Wurttemberg as of April 2025, according to the survey.

The fast-track programme was included in a series of reforms to German citizenship rules introduced last year by the former chancellor Olaf Scholz. It required applicants to demonstrate high German language proficiency and “proof of being well-integrated into German society”, according to German news outlet DW.

While it was cancelled, other changes made by the Scholz government remain in place.

Exact moment Louis Tomlinson was told about Liam Payne’s tragic death

Louis Tomlinson has recalled the moment he was informed about the death of his former One Direction bandmate Liam Payne – and he said “we all looked up to” the singer

Louis Tomlinson has revealed Niall Horan informed him about the death of the pair’s former One Direction bandmate Liam Payne, saying “we all looked up to him”.

The 33-year-old said Payne had been pushing for a reunion of the band, which also included Harry Styles and Zayn Malik. Payne died at the age of 31 in October last year after falling from a hotel balcony in Argentina.

Speaking to host Steven Bartlett on The Diary Of A CEO podcast, Tomlinson said he was in Los Angeles when he first heard of Payne’s death.

“In the car, in LA. I found out through Niall,” he said, telling Bartlett the news evoked a similar reaction to when his sister Felicite died of an accidental drug overdose in 2019.

“I had the same feeling that I had with Felicite, and I think anyone has this when they’re around someone who’s struggling; my 150 per cent wasn’t nearly enough.

“And that’s when it’s my own arrogance thinking that I could have helped really, because it was so much deeper than what I could have done for him. He was definitely struggling at that time in his life.”

READ MORE: Louis Tomlinson’s heartbreaking promise to dead mum – that still drives him todayREAD MORE: Cheryl Tweedy seen for first time since Liam Payne’s funeral and stalking hell

A post-mortem examination report said Payne died of multiple traumas and “internal and external haemorrhage” after falling from a third-floor balcony of the Casa Sur Hotel in Buenos Aires.

At the time, Tomlinson shared an Instagram post in which he said he was “beyond devastated” to have “lost a brother”. Tomlinson told Bartlett: “When I put up my post about him, I really wanted him to be remembered the way that he should be remembered. I could just go on and talk all day about how amazing he was, but I think we all looked up to him.”

Tomlinson also revealed that Payne had been campaigning for a One Direction reunion, but he said it would not feel “right”.

“Never say never… but I’m just not sure it would be right to (Payne). Say for the sake of argument, 25 year’s time, it’s like a f****** Oasis thing, they offer us an arm and a leg, and they’re like, ‘Come back and do this many shows’, I don’t know. (Payne’s death) just completely put a pin in all of that. And the irony is, there was no one campaigning for One Direction to get back more than Liam. I would say I came in a close second.”

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A court in Argentina dropped charges in February of criminal negligence against three out of the five people who had been charged in connection with Payne’s death.

At the Brit Awards in March he was remembered with a video montage which showed him with his family and a clip from his time on The X Factor and then with One Direction, who won seven gongs at the music awards before they split up.

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International friendly: England v Wales

Venue: Wembley Date: Thursday, 9 October Kick-off: 19:45 BST

Defender Ben Davies is targeting a Wales win at Wembley to help set up the crucial World Cup qualifier against Belgium.

Wales face England on Thursday – four days before facing Group J rivals Belgium in Cardiff.

Wales sit third in their group, behind second placed Belgium and leaders North Macedonia, in pursuit of a place at next summer’s World Cup finals.

Davies feels a first win against England in Wembley since 1977 would be an ideal way to go into the Belgium game.

“We’re playing against a top 10 nation in the world, a very good team,” said the 32-year-old Wales skipper.

Davies, who will be winning a 99th Wales cap at Wembley, added: “As a squad, we’ve worked hard this week, we’ve looked at the qualities that these teams have and feel like we’re as prepared as we can be.

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The last time a Wales team beat England on their home turf was in 1977 when Leighton James scored a penalty in a 1-0 win.

Davies would love to replicate that result even if it has not been a main focus.

“It’s definitely in the back of our minds,” said the Tottenham Hotspur defender.

“Every game against England is going to be competitive. There’s a big sense of pride on the line in these games, but we’re really looking forward to it.

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Davies has played against England three times, including a 2-1 loss at Euro 2016 – a result that still rankles.

“The 2016 one, it still hurts the last-minute goal to concede, but in that one we were playing a game more result-dependent,” he said.

“We’re very lucky in this team that we have incredible guys all across the board, players that come in, players that maybe don’t play every single time but show their best foot every time they come in.

“It’s just a fun environment to be around. We enjoy each other’s company on the pitch, off the pitch. It feels like playing with your mates at times. So when you do get out on that pitch you know that you’ve got each other’s backs whatever is thrown at us.”

Davies has also experienced two 3-0 defeats against England, at the 2022 Qatar World Cup and in a 2020 friendly at Wembley.

“They’re games that we know we’re playing against top opposition but we felt like we could have done a lot better and given a much better account of ourselves. So they’re games that stay in the memory,” he added.

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