Thursday, July 17, 2008

Louis Vuitton Mahina



Louis Vuitton has done it again. They have made a bag that is pricey and highly sought after. I really love this bag !! This bag remind me of the Jimmy Choo Alex, but lil' bit more slouchy.
The Louis Vuitton Mahina when it was first released (dubbed the Louis Vuitton XL and XXL) and since then there has been Mahina mayhem. But the bags, both in XL and XXL are available in eLuxury right now. The XL costs $3100 while the XXL costs $3900. Told you, expensive, yet understated with the monogram LV and the large slouch. One of my obsession handbag. Grab it while you can!

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Designer Handbags- How To Tell Whether It Is Authentic


First of all, check the location of the seller, which is posted in the auction. In many, BUT NOT ALL, cases, sellers from Asia are selling replica bags. The reason behind this is that countries in this area have very unspecific intellectual property laws, so factories which manufacture replica products are very prevalent. Sellers from China, Korea and Singapore are especially dangerous.

Also, it is important to check the wrapping of the bag in the picture. Paper around buckles, plastic over handles, and square tags of material hanging from a strap are all telltale signs of a replica. Brand new bags from the boutiques never have any wrapping around them UNLESS THE BAG WAS SPECIAL ORDERED. Special-ordered bags are typically the newest "It" bags, like the Louis Vuitton Speedy 30 was a few years ago. In contrast, the Louis Vuitton Cabas Mezzo is hardly ever special ordered because it is a classic. Get a very clear answer from the seller when it comes to the circumstances of purchasing the bag.

If the seller says the bag is from the internet, ask them which website. Websites usually leave the wrapping on bags, however there are very few websites that sell authentic bags from high end designers. eLuxury is the most prevalent one, also the websites of department stores (Neiman Marcus, Saks, Macy's, etc) will sell authentic bags. When these websites do have wrapping on their items, the handles are covered in tissue paper/plastic and buckles are covered in blue plastic adhesive. Additionally, the squares of leather that hang from straps are only on replicas.

Finally, it is important to do research on what the bag should look like. If there is a store in your area that carries the bag that you look for, take a trip and look at the ones that are carried. Pay close attention to exact colors, the way seams meet, stamps in the leather, markings on hardware. If you are not able to go to a store where authentic bags are sold, try eLuxury or the manufacturer website. Another option is looking up auctions that are verified by mypoupette or other authenticity verification service. Not all authentic bags are verified by these services, but nearly all bags verified by these services are authentic. Take a close look at the pictures provided, even keep watch of the auction.

An authentic bag should always have a dustbag, authenticity/care cards, and sometimes a reciept. However, these are also counterfitted, so do not rely on these as the sole verification source.

The final red flag to look out for is sellers who sell large numbers OF THE SAME ITEM. This is different from sellers who sell alot of the same BRAND. For example, a person who has 25 Louis Vuitton speedy 30 handbags is very suspicious, while a seller who has 50 Louis Vuitton handbags that are 30 different styles is much more legitimate. Sellers who do wholesale are always selling replicas; wholesale meaning that they have large numbers of the same item that they sell at a large discount (over 50%).

The most important thing, when buying a high end designer bag, is to do research, find a reputable seller, ask questions, and be comfortable with your purchase. Never rush into a sale (don't quickly read over an auction then bid right before it ends) and always ask any questions you have before bidding. The world of high fashion is full of excitement and glamour, and do not settle for anything less than what you want.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Giorgio Armani Luxury Traveler Collection

Although travel by steamship has gone by the wayside and prim suits have been replaced by sweatsuits as appropriate airplane attire, vacationing doesn't have to be entirely lacking in glamour this summer. Inspired by the elegance of bygone eras, Giorgio Armani has just introduced its Luxury Traveler Collection, a set of distinctive pieces of luggage guaranteed to turn even average tourists into modern day Rita Hayworths. For women, the three-piece set features a travel bag, vanity case, and suitcase, all in black or brown patent crocodile skin made particularly glossy by a special agate cylinder finish, while men get a four-piece collection of different sized suitcases and a doctor's bag in printed calfskin. We can’,t say whether Armani’,s jet-setting lifestyle of island hopping and rubbing elbows with the likes of Tom Cruise had an impact, but if the hand-stitched nappa leather lining, a personalized metal label, and a crocodile skin address holder are any indication, the sophistication of the sets will certainly make an impact on fellow vacationers.

The Giorgio Armani Luxury Traveler Collection, price upon request, visit giorgioarmani.com for Giorgio Armani Boutique locations

Yves Saint Laurent, 1936-2008

"Fashion fades. Style is eternal."—Yves Saint Laurent

He was a fashion designer by trade, but Yves Saint Laurent’s enduring legacy is that of gender equalizer, silhouette soothsayer, child prodigy, and inventor of the ready-to-wear category. Saint Laurent, who died in his Paris home at age 71 on Sunday, forever changed the modern woman’s wardrobe with the tuxedo jackets, trench coats, and most memorably, pants, he both glamorized and popularized in the 1960s and 70s.

When Christian Dior died in 1958, then-21-year-old Saint Laurent, his former assistant, took over at the house to instant raves (thanks in part to the flatteringly novel trapeze dress). Over the next few years designing for the house of Dior, he set the stage for ultimate change agents like Marc Jacobs and Miuccia Prada, being the first to continuously surprise each season with new lengths, moods, shapes, and tones.

Saint Laurent opened his own couture house in 1962, radically altering his aesthetic every six months to the delight and anticipation of fashion followers worldwide. By 1968, he decided that couture’s stuffy moment had passed, that the line between day and eveningwear had become blurred, and that stylish young women on the street were the best source of inspiration. He proposed a radical idea—that women wear pants every day. He offered smart suits that became an integral part of a woman’s wardrobe, leaving his indelible mark on the world of fashion.

That same year, Saint Laurent opened his first Rive Gauche store on Madison Avenue, bringing ready-to-wear to New Yorkers. While everyone else’s hemlines were rising, the skirts in his shop hit at mid-calf and were declared the new notion of sex appeal. Over the next 35 years, Saint Laurent reinvented his own classics—the safari jacket, le smoking, leopard prints—countless times, reversing public opinion that clothes needed to change drastically twice a year, and instead establishing himself as a designer both adaptable to change and highly capable of engendering it.

In 2000, the house of Yves Saint Laurent was purchased by the Gucci Group, and the designer announced his retirement two years later (along with the dissolution of YSL couture). He retreated to his Paris home, where he ended a long battle with brain cancer on Sunday.


Source: All About Yves by Tracey Lomrantz