Think about the depth of field and what you want to draw attention to.
You need to empasize 2 things (if I get your intent correctly):
1) Slipper
2) Mud around it, the slipper texture being dirty... etc
You chose to line up the focal plane parallel to the ground. It's ineffective. The slipper is in focus, but all the leaves and branches are also tack sharp and draw attention away from the shoe. Not good.
How old are you? Cause it looks looks like you have some back problems

You should've at least bent yourself, so that the slipper takes 2/3rds of the frame.
I'd compose it like this:
Lower the camera to the ground level. Look at the shoe from the side and from up close. Let it fill in more than half of the frame. Because the shoe close to the camera and takes up a lot of, make it in focus and you have WHAM: LOOK AT THE SHOE!
The in focus part of the shoe should be dirty and with some interesting structure on it.
The remaining part of the frame should be for surroundings. Line is up so that there are some leaves, dirt or a piece of turd in focus.
Keep the aperture reasonably fast, so that the background is SMOOTH.
You'd have a picture with:
Cool! big shoe... in focus... let's look at texture. Hmm... dirty background... But the shoe once was clean...
And try to get some lines in the background to connect the shoe and the mud.
Cheers