Discount Designer Handbags & Purses

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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Chloe handbags will make you look and feel sexy


Chloe handbags are a paradox of romance and femininity. If you want to look sexy and sassy, a Chloe handbag will definitely help with that. You can choose from gorgeous and elegant evening bags, or perhaps a more casual looking shoulder bag or tote would suit you better. Whichever you prefer, Chloe will make you happy!

The designer of the Chloe bag is Phoebe Philo. She has a fabulous talent for knowing exactly how women want to dress. Phoebe creates her Chloe designs from her Parisian studio. She likes to mix feminine materials with rock chic nonchalance along with a healthy dose of London attitude.
Chloe handbags are so tastefully designed that they disappear from the shelves as quickly as they appear. So grab your Chloe bag when you can, because as every fashion savvy woman knows, Chloe doesn't hang around!

Chloe designer handbags are made using high quality materials and attractive detailing. You will find gold and brass hardware on the majority of
Chloe handbags giving them a very rich look. Chloe evening bags are a sophisticated addition to any type of evening wear. Choose from a variety of Chloe purses in elegantly designed styles and colors.

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Sunday, November 25, 2007

The it-bag parade
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Telegraph.co.uk

Ten years ago your handbag was just a receptacle for purse and keys. Nowadays it's a fashion statement that says more about you than anything else in your wardrobe. Judy Rumbold casts a quizzical eye over a decade of it-bags and the celebrities who have wielded the

Ten years ago no one made a lot of noise about handbags. They were simply humdrum accessories, along with shoes and jewellery, that added the finishing touches to clothes. They were practical, functional and not at all sexy. How things have changed. Due to clever marketing, celebrity endorsement and, it seems, feverish acquisitiveness on a monstrous scale, the world has gone mad for bags. The more the better. One for every outfit. In every colour and size and myriad combinations of pulse-quickening studs, tassels, quilting and hardware. Now bags are cult items, must-have accessories for which ordinarily sensible women will submit to all sorts of indignities - interminable waiting-lists, unseemly bidding wars on eBay, hissy fits in department-store handbag departments. All because they saw Sienna Miller carrying it in Heat. Is there a woman alive who isn't infected by it-bag fever? Is there a man alive who has the faintest idea why handbags suddenly cost a month's salary? And it all started a decade ago with one little bag from Fendi

1998 Fendi Baguette

Being named after a loaf may not sound all that promising on paper, but this is the style widely credited as the original it-bag. Designed by Silvia Venturini Fendi to tuck neatly under the arm like French bread, the early designs featured the double-F logo created by Karl Lagerfeld when he began working for the company in 1962. The hype surrounding the Baguette began after the company held a legendary sample sale in New York in December 1997. The bags had yet to take off, and the company offered them to fashion insiders, including many magazine editors, for the breathtakingly low price of £25 each, or £50 for the fur variety. Shortly afterwards, during the European fashion collections in March 1998, armies of fashion folk turned up flaunting their cut-price Baguettes. They were widely photographed, and an it-bag was born. Now more than 600 versions of the Baguette exist, ranging from a £200 black nylon one to a hand-loomed style costing £6,000.


1999 Prada Bowling

The p
olar opposite of the Baguette - more of a sandwich loaf - but welcomed by women whose daily haul stretched to more than a lipstick and credit card. Time has shown that celebrity likes a big bag - it says, 'I have stuff to carry, I am going places' - because it helps promote the impression that their lives aren't as shallow and pointless as all that. Inside a big bag there may well be frilly pants and make-up, but who says there isn't also a film script and even - whisper it - a book or two? Where the outsized ostrich-skin Prada bag gained legions of fans for functionality, it lost out in the sexy-name stakes. It seems that roomy bags are the ungainly outcasts of the bag world, with an impoverished lexicon. Outside the pages of Grazia, does any normal person actually say 'tote' or 'shopper'? This is the bag whose size prompted the silliest piece of fashion advice I have ever read: carry a big bag and your bum will look smaller. Now, I am as gullible as the next woman when it comes to quick-fix slimming solutions, but really. Have you ever mused on how slim Santa's bottom looks in relation to his big red sack? No, thought not.

Mention 'hardware' and you'd be forgiven for conjuring an image of men in brown coats selling nails by the ouknce. But the Saddle bag changed all that. Now hardware was all about seriously weighty bag embellishment - flashy buckles and rivets and sexy shiny stuff. Some versions of Dior's Saddle flaunted more horse paraphernalia than a Chingford theme pub, and women loved it. With its unique equestrian styling, it appealed to the pony-mad gymkhana-entrant in us all. A rosette declaring fourth place in the mane-plaiting discipline would have finished it off nicely. With the Saddle, John Galliano brought novelty and whimsy to mass-market bag design - no small achievement in the stiff, po-faced world of leather goods.





2001 Balenciaga Lariat


Hard to believe now, but the Lariat was slow to sell when it first launched. Then the highly successful 'seeding' technique was used. Thirty of the bags were sent to fashion's most influential names, and it duly appeared hooked over the bankable shoulders of Kate Moss and Sienna Miller. The bag, inspired by fringed leather biker paraphernalia, became wildly desirable, and another it-bag was born. Ordinarily sensible women who, under normal circumstances, couldn't give a monkey's about this or that vacuous celebrity, suddenly turned all silly when there was a nice bag involved. The madness shows little sign of abating.

For a bag to be pictured on a celebrity arm is priceless PR, but it has to be the right calibre of arm. Keira Knightley is rumoured to receive 20 bags a week, which leads people like you and me to ponder this gross injustice: why do women with the least stuff to lug around own the most bags? I am guessing that Victoria Beckham, who owns a roomy Hermès Birkin in every colour, does not count among her daily haul a stash of balled-up tissues, any number of dog-eared Tesco Computers for Schools vouchers and a few Playmobil heads. This is possibly why she gets sent free bags and we don't.

2002 Luella Gisele

This bag established the trend for ensuring exclusivity and heightening the buzz by giving bags their own names. Not plebby names like Tracy and Pat, but aspirational or iconic names. The Tod's Lady Di tote and Gucci's Jackie bag were earlier forerunners. The Gisele, named after the model Gisele Bündchen, is festooned with more fancy bridlery than a prancing show pony. Fabulous to look at but - and I speak as an owner here - a pig to use. Takes an age to get in and out of. People in Post Office queues hate you. Still, when has practicality ever been the key selling point of an it-bag? Women want it-bags for lots of different reasons, very few of them to do with having enough room to stash a spare nappy and a Thermos. Women want fashionable bags because they impart status, because they can render a boring outfit instantly fabulous and because they allow entry-level access to a designer name whose clothes they might never be able to afford. When guilt strikes at the £500-plus price tag, women can comfort themselves with this thought: bags are democratic and inclusive. They transcend tricky divisions to do with weight, age and social status. In short, bags are not just for skinny bitches. There is no such thing as a size-zero bag.

Following the spring show that featured the Murakami-designed bags, the
customer-services lines at Louis Vuitton were jammed with orders. The first shipments never hit the sales floor - they were all pre-sold. There is a school of thought that says Louis Vuitton's creative director, Marc Jacobs - who brought the Japanese artist Takashi Murakami on board for this project - is little short of God where bags are concerned; am I allowed to say that, in the case of the Multicolore, this was God having an off-day? But who cares what I think, because the Multicolore sold by the shedload and was, of course, widely copied. Spare a thought here for Louis' son Georges Vuitton, who in 1896 created the intricate LV logo with the express intention of preventing counterfeiting. He failed abysmally.

Vuitton is the most knocked-off brand in fashion history. Despite its garish 33-colour logo design, the Multicolore was a model of good taste next to a later Vuitton offering, the Tribute Patchwork, which sold at £23,484 - nearly £3,000 more than a Mercedes C180 Coupé. Why so much? It was made from cut-up bits of 15 Louis Vuitton bags and incorporated rare feathers and alligator skins. Ah, LV, we love you more when you're discreet.

2004 Mulberry Roxanne

Known to devotees as the Roxy, this baby ticked all the right it-bag boxes. It had pockets, buckles and more studs than a porn shoot at the Hefner mansion. It cost £595, but in a sea of silly bags it was seen as the epitome of grown-up practicality. Not for the first time retailers used engineered scarcity to create waiting-list hysteria in order to elevate a bag's covetability. Mulberry states that leather goods now account for more than 80 per cent of its profits, and the same goes for most labels. Bags are much easier to sell than clothes, the profit margins are huge and manufacturers don't have to bother with the tedious issue of sizing. Women have fallen hook, line and sinker for the notion that it is vital to acquire a 'wardrobe' of bags for all occasions. You may be clothed head to toe in Primark, but you'll still cut it as fashion-savvy dresser if you're shouldering the right bag.

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2005 Chloé Paddington

Keep up, a anyone who thought Paddington was still about stations and bears in duffle coats. When Net-a-Porter went live with its first stash of Paddington bags, it sold 376 of them in 36 hours. This is the bag that took the trend for ostentatious hardware to a whole new level, as anyone who has ever been on the receiving end of a blow to the head from a wayward padlock will attest. The Paddington exemplified the girly clubbiness that comes with bag ownership. A bag speaks volumes about its owner's personality, much as your choice of comic/ popstar did when you were ten. Bags have become like grown-up girl-toys, a few stages on from Barbies and Polly Pockets. Their owners regard them more as cuddly playthings than practical receptacles. What woman hasn't whiled away the odd half hour toying idly with her beloved bag's many clasps and pockets, inhaling deeply of its leathery innards and marvelling at the sound of its satisfying clunks and snaps? Or perhaps that's just me.


2006 Marc Jacobs Stam

Named after the model and actress Jessica Stam, this has the highest profile of any of Marc Jacobs's bags, and at £760 represents a distillation of every popular it-bag detail to date, from its squashy quilted-leather body to its show-offy hardware, huge fastenings and heavy gold chain strap. Never let it be said that Marc Jacobs devotees play safe with colours: peanut and mustard are current bestselling shades. Kate Moss, Scarlett Johansson and Dita Von Teese are fans. This was the year a Mintel report stated that British women spend £350 million a year on bags, with sales up 146 per cent on the previous five years. And handbags have become the fastest growing sector of the luxury fashion market.


2007 YSL Downtown

This much-copied bucket-shaped bag is indicative of a move towards quieter, more low-key design. Not so brash and bling - unless you opt for the leopard-print version. A decade after the arrival of the Fendi Baguette, the average price of it-bags has gone from £600 to £1,000. New statistics say that the typical 30-year-old now owns 21 bags and buys a new one every three months, adding up to a total outlay of more than £8,000 over a lifetime. Tips for guilty women: do not on any account sit there pondering what you might buy for the same money - it will make you ill. Instead, divide the cost by the daily use the bag will get, and you will emerge thinking what a clever bargain you have landed. Get your orders in now for the 2008 mega-bags. Will you go for the Mulberry Poppy (satchel version, please) or YSL's Muse Two in patchwork? Choose carefully as there is a definite move towards the more well-crafted discreetly logo-ed it-bag. Shame. There's a certain giddy high to be had from announcing to the world, via a bag, just how flash you are.

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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Fashionista designer handbag gift guide: eFashionHouse purses below retail




Dedicated to offering authentic designer handbags and accessories at below retail prices, eFashionHouse.com puts together a gift guide for handbag lovers around the globe.

Sky Valley, CA (PRWEB) November 21, 2007 – With the holidays upon us and Chanukah and Christmas just around the corner, eFashionHouse.com, named "Best of the Web" by People magazine StyleWatch for discount designer handbags, has made shopping for that special fashionista a little easier with the ultimate gift guide sure to please the hard-to-please without breaking the budget.

§ Chanel: For the ultimate lover of all things couture, a Chanel handbag is always the perfect gift. Although there is never a shortage of Chanel styles to add to the list, finding a Chanel handbag on sale or at a discount (an authentic Chanel that is) is not always as easy. Recently recognized by About.com as one of the top three re-sellers of Chanel handbags, eFashionHouse.com offers a large selection of Chanel handbags and accessories at up to 50% off.

§ Chloé: A staple of every fashionista’s closet, Chloé quickly became a favorite among magazine editors and fashion mavens because of the brands supple leathers and one-of-the kind looks. But grabbing one of the most sought after handbags doesn’t come cheap unless you know where to look. eFashionHouse.com’s entire selection of authentic Chloé handbags has been deeply discounted which makes owning one of these prized beauties a little more attainable.

§ Christian Dior: Thanks to “Sex in the City” and the infamous “saddlebag,” Christian Dior became a household name and with introduction of the Dior Lady Bag, ladies are once again clamoring to get their hands on the latest Dior craze. At 50% off, eFashionHouse.com means you don’t have pine after the Dior Lady for too long.

§ Prada and Gucci: Always synonymous with fine Italian craftsmanship and famous Italian fashion, Prada and Gucci continue to maintain their presence as two of the top fashion houses in the world. With a huge selection to choose from and up to 60% off, eFashionHouse.com turns adding another Prada and Gucci handbag to your collection from a must-do to an already done.

In addition to Chanel, Chloé, Christian Dior, Prada and Gucci, the five stores at eFashionHouse.com have hundreds of today’s top name designers, including Tods, Coach, Yves Saint Laurent, Fendi, Etro, Nancy Gonzalez, Balenciaga, Hogan, Hermes, Mulberry and more, all available at below retail prices and all 100% guaranteed authentic. And for a limited time use the following coupon codes upon check out to receive additional discounts on every purchase for total savings of up to 90% off retail!




  • Use coupon code OFF20 for an extra 20% off FINAL CLEARANCE items.
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  • Plus, Free Fedex to Lower 48 States $200 orders & NO Sales Tax World Wide!


About eFashionHouse.com
Anna Miller is the President of i-GlobalMall.com, Inc. She operates the website
http://www.efashionhouse.com and sells high-end authentic designer handbags and accessories at off-retail prices. EFashionHouse.com was named Best of the Web by People Magazine StyleWatch for Discount Designer Handbags and Purses. EfashionHouse.com should not be confused with any other website selling a similar product or using a similar name. EfashionHouse.com is the home of five fashion ecommerce stores: BrandsBoutique, LuxuryVintage, DesignersLA, ItalysOutlet, and ValueBags. Anna is considered an Internet Pioneer & Ecommerce Entrepreneur. She’s been reselling Designer Merchandise online since the early 90s.

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Monday, October 29, 2007

The Sienna syndrome

The Times of India

Handbags are often looked upon as fashion accessories, but lately, they seem to be turning into more of lifestyle necessities.

Dubbed as the ‘Sienna Miller Syndrome,’ the magnitude of the handbag obsession has been revealed by a new study, according to which a woman owns 111 handbags in the course of her lifetime.

The survey, carried out by Lakeside shopping centre in Essex, found that an average 30-year-old owns 21 handbags and buys a new one every three months, which totals to 111 handbags over the life span, with a total expenditure of more than 8,000 pounds.

Five per cent of those surveyed even owned up to possessing more than 100 handbags at present, with the average pay out on each handbag being 76 pounds.The research team, which polled 1,500 shoppers about their handbags, say that the trend of carrying expensive designer brands has been popularised by celebrities like Sienna Miller and Lindsay Lohan, who sport swanky and exclusive arm accessories.

The survey also revealed that women usually use three handbags on a regular basis, changing to suit the occasion, outfit or even their mood. Many handbags are passed down through generations, the survey found, with one in eight women owning one more than 50 years old.

The researchers say that one in three of those questioned had guilty consciences about their extreme handbag-buying habits. When asked what was the most they had ever spent on one, the average for women in their 20s was 185 pounds, while for 30-somethings it was a 380 pounds, with designer labels Mulberry and Chloe being most popular.

When asked why women collect so many handbags, almost seven in ten said it’s because you never know what they’ll go with. One in five said that the sentimental value of their handbags stops them throwing the old ones away.

Handbags can change your whole look and transform a plain outfit into one that’s set to impress. Often, women buy a new handbag to suit a certain outfit and don’t want to throw it away after just one use so keep hold of it to use again one day, a newspaper quoted Angela Poplett. a personal shopper at Lakeside shopping centre in Essex.

It’s clear from the results of this research that women have some sort of handbag obsession. Maggie Thatcher started the trend with her love for handbags and today’s celebrities such as Sienna Miller, Lindsay Lohan and Nicole Richie have followed in her footsteps so much so that I like to call this handbag obsession ‘Sienna Miller Syndrome,’ she added.
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Thursday, September 20, 2007

Discount Designer Handbags Without The High Price


Author: Tori A Hewitt


Women love designer handbags and women love bargains. Put together these two things, and you get the discount designer handbag. Many times, women who love the appearance and quality associated with designer handbags don't want to pay retail prices. The great news is that they may not have to. There are many different places where a savvy shopper can find a discount designer handbag.


There are several online retailers who offer a fabulous selection of genuine designer handbags at discounted prices. Brands Boutique is one such retailer. Brands Boutique boasts of a sizable inventory and wide selection of discount designer handbags, as well as many other types of discounted designer merchandise.


Those who shop with Brands Boutique can enjoy deep discounts on a wide variety of popular, high-end designers merchandise. The wide selection of designer merchandise available from Brands Boutique includes a wide selection of handbags designed by Hermes, Dolce & Gabbana, Dior, Diesel, Chloe, Chanel, Burberry, Balenciaga, Armani and many others. In addition to great deals on discount designer handbags, bargain hunters may also discover discounts on famous designer apparel and other accessories at Brands Boutique.


At Brands Boutique, bargain hunters have found excellent discount prices on classic handbags including the Gucci vintage aqua blue Jackie O shoulder bag -- the coveted red Birkin bag. Discount prices are also available on some of the more trendy designer handbags such as the Christian Dior denim handbag, the G Star recycled paper tote bag and the Dries van Noten distressed leather shoulder bag.


Another excellent online retailer specializing in discount designer handbags is Handbag Crew. While you aren't likely to find designer clothing at the Handbag Crew website, you will find an amazing selection of high-end discount designer handbags. This retailer specializes in the most sought-after designers such as Prada, Marc Jacobs, Fendi and others.

If you don't find the discount designer handbag of your dreams at the first online retailer you investigate, keep looking. There are many online retailers that offer a wide array of designer handbags at excellent discount prices. Remember that bargain hunting takes time and sometimes requires strategy. That is why it is called hunting! Make sure to purchase your discount designer handbag from a retailer that certifies the authenticity of your purchase and offers deeply discount pricing. There is nothing more satisfying than finding a great deal on the perfect designer handbag to complete your wardrobe.
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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Many find teenagers' expensive tastes both scary and shocking


By Monica Corcoran , Los Angeles Times


LOS ANGELES — Jillian Hurwitz doesn’t really need to shop for a back-to-school wardrobe. After all, the stylish 15-year-old attends a private school where she wears a uniform every day. But that didn’t stop her from hitting the racks at the Madison boutique in Brentwood on a recent afternoon.


Forget cruising the mall for $39.99 Gap fall sweaters. At the moment, Jillian is dallying with an armful of designer jackets and jumpers by Marc Jacobs.


Chanel is definitely my favorite designer,” she says, emerging from the dressing room. She adds that her most prized designer purse is a black Yves Saint Laurent Muse bag, which sells for about $1,200. Her best friend, 14-year-old Jennifer Hourani, prefers her Chloe Paddington handbag. But today, Jennifer is carrying a pristine, white leather Dolce & Gabbana tote (it was shelved after Labor Day).


If this all leaves you aghast, you haven’t spent enough time at the mall lately. Teens have become a force in the luxury market. The days of begging parents for a Benetton rugby or Coach saddle bag are long gone. They don’t just covet luxury goods, they buy them. A lot of them, in fact.


Designer labels make up about 15.3 percent of purchases by 13- to 17-year-olds, according to a recent study by New York-based marketing research company NPD Group. Five years ago, that figure hovered at 9.6 percent. Increasingly, luxury brands are catering to younger customers.


There may be no generation as thoroughly saturated in brand advertising as the one growing up right now. Beyond the glossy ads in magazines and on television, Marc Jacobs runs Internet campaigns, celebrities are paid to brandish luxury goods (and what they wear is dutifully chronicled in gossip columns and Web sites) and luxury campaigns feature preteen spokesgirls. Not to mention label names are actual plot points in TV shows, music and movies.


No wonder teens talk waaaaay more about labels than their parents. A recent survey of more than 2,000 13- to 17-year-olds by marketing consultants Keller Fay Group found that kids have 145 conversations about brands per week. Adults invoke brand names about half as often.


Jillian and Jennifer are more fluent than most. They shop every weekend and quickly spot the new inventory at Ron Herman. Last summer, the girls bought purses in France and Spain — one that they will even share. And Jillian has her heart set on a quilted red Chanel designer handbag for her 16th birthday in February.


Jillian and Jennifer attend the Archer School for Girls, where the dress code forbids creative ensembles and excessive jewelry. When it comes to book bags and handbags, however, the sky is apparently the limit.


“Girls at school have Birkin bags,” says Jillian, referring to the iconic carryall by Hermes that commands upward of $10,000 and a two-year wait list. “I don’t know if I have seen anyone with a crocodile one, though.”



“The luxury brands are endearing themselves to younger audiences and making an emotional connection,” says J. Elias Portnoy, chief strategist at brand marketing agency the Portnoy Group. “If you develop a relationship early, you’re likely to have a customer for life.”


Jillian was willing to give up all her other gifts to get the YSL Muse bag last Christmas, says her mom, Laurie Feltheimer, who oversees a fashion Web site called “Hot in Hollywood” on hsn.com. Dad Jon Feltheimer runs Lionsgate. “Girls today know about the ‘It’ bag before it even comes out,” Laurie Feltheimer says. “It makes me a little sad.”


Skye Peters is another 15-year-old Archer School student who shops at Neiman Marcus and Barneys for her school tights. Her dream designers are Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent — she even pronounces Laurent flawlessly with a silent T — and she also shoulders a YSL Muse purse as her book bag.


Skye, whose parents are Hollywood producers Jon Peters and Christine Forsyth-Peters, says she sees classmates carrying moderately priced Le Sportsac carryalls, too. “Mainly, it’s the younger girls who have Birkins,” she says. “I guess it’s a little weird, since they are so expensive.”


Then again, the news in Us Weekly and other tabloids that Lindsay Lohan’s orange Birkin bag was stolen from Heathrow Airport last year enlightened her fans to the brand. An article on About.com on teen fashion lists the Hermes Birkin as a “must-have item of the moment that every handbag enthusiast should own, or at least know about.”


Blame Hollywood, too. Two years ago, on the now canceled “Gilmore Girls,” Rory received a Birkin from her boyfriend. She promptly responded by saying, “I love you,” and he replied, “The lady who sold this purse to me said that was going to happen.”


Now, that’s a romantic spin on young love.


French luxury retailer Hermes doesn’t market to teens, but other designers have no qualms about courting the Clearasil set. In this month’s Teen Vogue, glossy ads for oversize fall handbags by Gucci, Chloe, and Louis Vuitton can be found in the first 10 pages of the mini-magazine with a cult following among teenagers.


And that’s just the ads. The women’s media Web site Jezebel.com recently tallied the prices of the merchandise featured in the editorial content of the September issue of Teen Vogue to a total of $74,458. Per their research, Cosmopolitan — not CosmoGirl, mind you — rang in at just $27,636.64.


The fact that dewy Scarlett Johansson pouts as the face of Vuitton and Lohan now fronts for Jill Stuart is no accident either. Just ask Calvin Klein. When the designer put Brooke Shields, then 15 and an idol to teen girls, in his jeans for ads in 1980, CBS banned the commercial, but denim sales soared.


Marc Jacobs — who featured 12-year-old Dakota Fanning in his clothing ads in February — takes youth marketing to a new level with his new fragrance, Daisy. The scent’s MySpace-inspired online campaign revolves around a Web community that you must be invited to join. Who but a sullen teen sent to her room has time to play games to win Marc Jacobs screen savers?


Even Karl Lagerfeld’s recent announcement that he will design a line of eponymous handbags and luggage that won’t exceed $1,000 sounds like a way to target his adoring adolescent Chanelphiles.


“I get it,” says Jillian, over a cup of pea soup at California Pizza Kitchen. “These designers know that we like their brands and want to suck up to us.”


On this afternoon, Jillian wears Chanel flats and a pair of Chanel logo earrings. She adds that salespeople at the Beverly Hills store don’t shun her because of her age. “They’re nice to us.”


“These luxury stores don’t shoo out teens anymore,” says Portnoy, the marketing strategist. “They’ve been instructed to keep an eye out for them and take care of them.”


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Thursday, September 13, 2007

Fab Bag of the Day - Chloe Carmel Shoulder Bag


Although there's been a lot of talk about how big bags can hurt your shoulders or be cumbersome at times, we still prefer a bigger bag for our everyday bag. Today's featured designer handbag from CHLOE is a great everyday bag because it has a comfortable shape, a lot of pockets and comes in a rich caramel shade. CHLOE designer purses measures approximately 12 inch wide by 11 inch tall with a 4 inch depth. Strap measures about 24 inches long with a n 11 inch drop. Strap is 1.5 inches wide. Hardware is silver with brass pull rings. Fully lined interior with one zippered pocket. Detachable coin wallet attached. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag.

Click here to shop authentic CHLOE handbags at up to 60% off retail price!

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