Discount Designer Handbags & Purses

Designer Handbags Blog for eFashionHouse.com - People StyleWatch's Best of the Web for Off-Retail Priced Designer Handbags Purses & Accessories! About.com's Top Online Retailer for Chanel Handbags & Accessories!

eFashionHouse: ValueBags, BrandsBoutique, DesignersLA, LuxuryVintage, ItalysOutlet - Since 1996

Friday, June 20, 2008

Discount Designer Purses - Where you can go to Find Coach Handbags





from - "Find Your Best Deal On Designer Handbags Now"

Coach is a brand name that can easily be considered as one of the most popular in regards to handbags and purses and items of the like, and so if you are interested in finding Coach handbags that you can purchase then you will at least be glad to know that you have many options available to you. Besides the actual Coach store itself, there are many other stores that offer Coach handbags.

Coach purses and handbags are considered as being one of the most sought after types around, and Coach is actually a business that was started more than 50 years ago, and in fact the very first inspiration for Coach bags came from the simple beauty and rugged durability of a classic American baseball glove.

Coach is a company that has truly always been able to maintain the absolute highest standards in regards to not only the materials that they use but in regards to their workmanship as well. They truly and earnestly take pride in what they do, and they are constantly striving to make themselves better.

Quality has always been a top priority with this company, and it is not just the fact that Coach bags have such a high quality that keeps the customers coming back for more; it is also the fact of the wide selection that they have, as they have a tremendous array of products for women, men, and children as well.

Where can I Find Coach Handbags?

In regards to where you can go to actually find and purchase Coach handbags there are many options; for instance, you can go to BagsForMe.com, which is a company that not only offers Coach handbags but a wide variety of other items as well.

There are truly so many options that you have when it comes to looking for this sort of item, and you can buy it new, used, right from the manufacturer, and one of the most popular ways to buy it is vintage; there are many a vintage store out there that have many different Coach products to choose from, and so no matter what type you are specifically looking for, you are sure to be able to find something that you like.

As well, you can typically find this brand of bag for a relatively inexpensive price, just make sure that you take the time to look around rather than doing impulse buying.

Labels: ,

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Fab Bag of the Day - Coach Multicolored Hobo


You don't often see handbags in this crescent shape which is why today's featured designer handbag from COACH really stood out to us. COACH small multicolored handbag featuing a watercolors striped pattern and tan leather trim. COACH handbag measures approximately 12 W x 8.5 H with a 3 inch depth. Strap measures about 19 inches long with a 7 inch drop.

Click here to shop this authentic COACH handbag at 12% off now.
______

Labels: ,

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Fab Bag of the Day - Coach Hamptons Handbag


Black and white has long been a fashion staple because of the classic combination that never goes out of style and is a fresh alternative to the basic black. Today's featured designer handbag from COACH updates a timeless look with cream leather, black trim and silver hardware. Coach tote measures approximately 12 W x 11.5 H with a 6 inch depth. The leather straps measure about 20 inches long with an 8 inch drop. Coach leather fob tag attached.

Click here to shop this authentic COACH handbag at 25% off.

________

Labels: , ,

Sunday, December 09, 2007

Fab Bag of the Day - Silver Metallic Coach Hobo



Two things that we love this season are metallic and hobos which is why today's featured designer handbag from COACH tops our Christmas list this year. Since shiny has been such a hit, wearing metallic during the day went from a fashion faux pas to the latest fashion fix.

COACH designer handbag silver metallic hobo FS8B19. Coach name is etched in the silver strap rings.Leather Coach pull tab attached to zipper. Measures approximately 10 inch length by 6 inch tall with a 2.25 inch depth. Adjustable strap measures about 16 inches long with a 6 inch drop. Fully lined interior in a light blue fabric with one zippered pocket. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag.

Click here to shop this authentic COACH handbag at 24% off! Plus take an additional 20% off your purchase with coupon code OFF20.
_________

Labels: , , , ,

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Fab Bag of the Day - Coach Quilted Hobo

If you are like us you wait until the last minute to go shopping for holiday gifts but one brand we know we can always depend on for a great gift is COACH handbags. With the numerous styles, you are sure to find the perfect gift for everyone on your list.

COACH designer handbags genuine fur quilted monogram nylon coach 3586 medium hobo. Secure top closure. Fully lined interior. Extra pockets inside bag for incidentals and storage. Bag measures about 11 x 11 inches. The single shoulder strap is about 19 inches long. The bag is trimmed with genuine rabbit fur. The hardware is brass and there is a tiny bit of metallic gold trim along the side seams. Coach monogram C pattern quilted to nylon fabric. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag.

Click here to shop this authentic COACH handbag at 18% off retail now!


Plus to make your gift really special, add this limited edition COACH key ring which is too cute to pass up! Use coupon code OFF10 for an additional 10% off your purchase!


COACH designerr key ring 386 red present motif gift box key fob. Silver with shades of red and burgundy colored enamel. Monogram and engraving. About 3 inches long. Silver key loop is about 1.5 inches in size. Guaranteed authentic. LAST ONE. Collector's Item! You save 20%, click here to shop now!


_____________

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Fab Bag of the day - Coach Lozenge Canvas Tote

Although COACH handbags offer a wide selection of styles and patterns, today's featured designer handbag, the COACH Lozenge tote, is a unique twist to its renowned logo. We love the gorgeous shade of blue mixed with cream and are entranced by the clever use of the logo.

COACH designer handbags signature lozenge coach name in blue on white canvas large tote. Style 10836. Measures approximately 14 W (at top of bag) x 12 H with a 5.5 inch depth. Blue leather straps measure about 20 inches long with a 9 inch drop. Brass hardware. Smooth blue leather bottom. Top closure has a dog leash clasp at top center of bag. Fully lined interior with one zippered pocket with the leather Coach ID and serial number and multiple open pockets. Leather ID tag attached to top of bag along with leather Coach fob and Coach brass medallion. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag.

Click here to shop this authentic COACH handbag at 24% off retail!
_____________

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Coach Purse and Handbags – Choosing the Right One

Posted by Manju in Shopping

Purses and handbags of much famed brand, Coach, are among the most sought after. In other words, each of the purses and handbags of the Coach now available is attractive, and is noted for its own unique attire. Al though not much stylish when compared to other trendy bags, Coach Handbags come with mind blowing designs, which in turn make it quite special.



Every Coach handbags is one of a kind, and differs from one another in their pattern, color, and style. Nowadays, Coach Handbags and purses are preferred by many ladies because of its simplicity as well as elegant style. Additionally, Coach Items come in unique blends of pockets, handles, and straps. Above all, only quality leather is used for the production of Coach Specialties. Perhaps, these bags are the most comfortable, weigh-less, and efficient now available in the market.



Here are some tips to choose right Coach Purse and handbags that go with your taste and preferences. For instance, nothing would be better than a small Coach Purse or handbag to make the evening out to the prom or to the opera truly special. Likewise, medium Coach purses or handbags would be most perfect for your everyday requirements. Above all, large Coach Handbags would be great for those who don’t want to leave anything behind.



Nowadays, options are endless to shop Coach Purse and Coach Handbag and discount Coach Handbags. With a plenty of sites on the web, it is not at all a tedious process to shop Coach Purse and handbags. Even options are available to shop these items online.

Labels: , , , , ,

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Coach's Win Streak Continues As Consumers Snap Up Handbags

BY MARILYN MUCH
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY

Laura Heath just can't have enough Coach bags.

In the past couple of years, she's amassed about 18 Coach bags of different types, eight of which she bought in the past 10 months. This year's purchases included two diaper bags, a travel bag, two handbags and a brief case.

Heath describes herself as a Coach "fanatic." She's impressed with the quality, look and styling of its bags. And she says it's well worth the $200 to $500 she typically pays for a Coach bag.

"The colors and leathers are beautiful," said Heath, of Littleton, Colo. "The bags always have a lot of style and sophistication. I'm happy to pay the price I pay for a Coach bag because they're nice, and it makes me feel good to buy something nice."

Heath isn't alone. The upscale accessories designer, marketer and retailer has been on a real winning streak. For the past five years, earnings have grown at an average annual clip of 46% and sales by 29%.

Most recently, in the fiscal fourth quarter ended June 30, earnings climbed 35% from the prior year to 42 cents a share. Sales grew 30% to $625.3 million.

Executives weren't available, but during the quarter, Coach kept growing market share in all channels and geographies, said Chief Executive Lew Frankfort.

"Our performance also reflects the vibrancy of the premium handbag and accessory category in North America, where we continue to see continued growth," he said.

In North America, the premium handbag and accessory category has been growing at about a 20% annual clip, says analyst Stacey Widlitz of Pali Research.

That has been a real plus for Coach, which is the U.S. market share leader in premium handbags and small leather goods.

Growth in the category comes at a time when consumers are spending less on volumes of clothing and are going in for a very expensive or high-quality accessories, Widlitz says.

"If you have an expensive handbag that completes your look, there's less need to go out and buy volumes of clothing," she said.

Women are buying more Coach handbags relative to other players, adds analyst Liz Dunn of Thomas Weisel Partners.

"Coach is taking share in a growing market," she said.

Coach is what management calls an "accessible luxury" brand, because its products go for lower, more affordable prices than the European luxury brands. Its products span a broad range of prices.

Handbags are Coach's biggest moneymaker at 64% of fiscal 2007 sales. The company's lineup also include small leather goods, business cases, and travel accessories.

At the low end of the price spectrum, Coach is gaining share from players like Kenneth Cole, (KCP) Wid-litz says. At the high end, it's taking share from players like Gucci.

"Consumers continue to discover the Coach brand as a high-end alternative to the increasingly over- priced competition of Gucci, Prada, Louis Vuitton and others," she wrote in a report.

You can buy an equivalent or more interesting style handbag at Coach for far less than at the competition, she says. Coach handbags sell at prices between 40% and 60% below European luxury brands.

Coach's customers aren't only buying more handbags, they're buying more expensive ones. In the fourth quarter, sales of handbags priced over $400 grew sharply from a year ago to 17% of handbag sales in Coach stores.

Coach sells its products through Coach stores, department stores, its catalog and Web site. As of June 30, it had 259 retail stores and 93 factory outlet stores in North America and 142 retail stores in Japan.

The Coach crew gives consumers lots of reasons to visit its stores. Management's strategy is to give customers a steady stream of innovative products.

"Management identifies different types of customers and attempts to meet all its customers' needs at all times with continued newness and innovation," analyst Dunn said. "They've been spot on in terms of fashion."

In any given year, Coach gets between 60% and 70% of its business from new products, she says. New collections, such as the Legacy introduced in October 2006, propel continued sales growth, she adds.

Each collection has a distinct look. Its newest collection, the Bleecker, launched on Sept. 24, offers consumers a fresh interpretation of bags and accessories inspired by classic Coach styles such as its original duffel bag, first introduced in 1973.

The next collection, set for limited international distribution in November and a full rollout in February, is crafted from coated cotton canvas.

Management has successfully extended the Coach brand into new areas including jewelry, footwear and, more recently, a fragrance, which was launched in March.

"The more new stuff in the stores, the more often people visit and the more often they buy," analyst Wid-litz said.

In addition to internal efforts, Coach has benefited from strong spending by high-end consumers over the past three years, giving a nice lift to luxury retailers.

"The high-end consumer continues to be the backbone of overall consumption," said Michael Niemira, chief economist at the International Council of Shopping Centers.

This segment has been largely unaffected by the housing problems.

Analysts polled by Thomson Financial expect earnings for fiscal 2008, ending next June, to rise 23% to $2.08 a share, then 19% in fiscal 2009.

In terms of expansion, Coach plans on adding about 40 new retail stores in North America in fiscal 2008, including 15 in the first quarter.

Internationally, Coach sees a big opportunity in China: "We believe Greater China has the potential to become a third leg for Coach handbags, following our North American and Japanese businesses," said Ian Bickley, president of Coach International, at a recent analyst meeting. "Although we are still in the very early stages of our development, we have made great progress."



COACH designer handbags cream and brown signature slim tote. Style 10826. Signature cotton bag with brown le
ather trim. Brass hardware. Measures approximately 16 W x 13 H with a 5 inch depth. Double leather strap have a 8.5 inch drop. Top has a dog leash closure. Two interior zippered pockets. Front large flap pocket with turn lock closure. Four protective metal feet. Comes with sleeper bag. Guaranteed authentic.









COACH designer handbags genuine fur quilted monogram nylon coach hobo. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag. Secure top closure. Fully lined interior. Extra pockets inside bag for incidentals and storage. This bag measures about 13 x 10 x 4 inches. The single shoulder strap is about 19 inches long. The bag is trimmed with genuine rabbit fur. The hardware is gold and there is a tiny bit of metalic gold trim along a few of the seams. The nylon quilting makes the bag light to carry.




________________

Labels: , , , , ,

Years of record growth for handbag sales could be over

By Cotten Timberlake Bloomberg News
NEW YORK: The $7 billion market in the United States for handbags, the fastest-growing product in the fashion industry, might be slowing from the record growth seen in recent years.

Some analysts and retailers say that the increases in U.S. handbag sales may have peaked, as competition from other accessories like shoes and jewelry heats up and as higher gasoline and mortgage costs slows consumer spending.

The sales increases that reached as high as 28 percent in 2004, the strongest annual pace on record, could fall back to as little as 15 percent this year, with no signs of recovering before 2009, according to the Telsey Advisory Group, a stock research firm in New York.

The firm was founded by Dana Telsey, a retail industry analyst who was ranked the top speciality stores analyst by Institutional Investor magazine every year in the seven years to 2005.

Stephen Sadove, chief executive of Saks, said the handbag's status as a must-have item is being challenged.
"It used to be all about the shoes and our woman had so many shoes in her closet, then it became the multiplicity of handbags," Sadove told investors at a Goldman Sachs conference in September. "What you are seeing now is a new trend, which is branded designer fine jewelry."
Handbag makers, led by Coach and Louis Vuitton, are vying for the attention of affluent consumers, who are turning their attention to items like Tory Burch ballet flats and David Yurman bracelets, retail executives said.

"The handbag business has softened up a little bit," said Kathryn Deane, president of Tobe, a fashion consulting firm in New York whose clients have included Macy's, Bloomingdale's, Nordstrom and Neiman Marcus. "When the consumer looks at accessories, she is not just looking at handbags anymore."

U.S. sales of handbags costing at least $100 could expand 20 percent this year, compared with a 22 percent increase last year, according to research from Coach, a maker of handbags and other accessories in New York. Coach and Telsey began providing sales data on handbags in 2001, after demand began to soar in the late 1990s.
Patricia Edwards, who helps manage investments including Coach shares at Wentworth, Hauser & Violich in Seattle, said, "Slower growth in the handbag segment overall is a prudent outlook given the economic situation we find ourselves in right now."

Coach, whose handbags sell for $200 to $400, expects overall revenue, which also includes jewelry, shoes and fragrances, to rise 21 percent in the year through June 28, 2008, said its chief financial officer, Michael Devine, at an analyst meeting at the company's headquarters in New York in September. In the year that ended in June, the company recorded a 28 percent rise, with handbags accounting for 64 percent of Coach's sales.

Sales at Coach stores in North America that have been open at least a year will rise "north of 10 percent," Devine said. His guidance is similar to what the company has said in previous years. In the year that ended in June, those sales rose 22 percent.

Coach is introducing three handbag lines this year. The retailer will need popular new products and a more buoyant economy to sustain the revenue gains of recent years, said Edwards, at Wentworth Howard.

"The growth further out might be more problematic unless they have a fabulous product line coincidental with better economic news," Edwards said.

While sales gains may be slowing, handbags are still leading the growth in the U.S. fashion industry, ahead of earrings, wallets and other small leather goods, according to NPD Group, a market research firm in Port Washington, New York.

Coach shares have risen 8.6 percent this year through Monday, outpacing the 7.7 percent climb for LVMH stock and the 1.5 percent decline for the Standard & Poor's 500 index of 29 U.S. retailers Louis Vuitton has found that "growth in the U.S. luxury market segment continues to accelerate on an annual basis," said Molly Morse, a spokeswoman for the company. She declined to provide more detailed figures, and Louis Vuitton does not provide revenue figures for its various divisions.

John Guy, an analyst at MF Global Securities in London, estimated that sales of fashion and leather goods at LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, the parent company of Louis Vuitton, could slow from the 11 percent growth recorded in 2006.

At Prada, based in Milan, "we are growing the handbag business at a faster pace compared to other product categories," said a spokesman, Tomaso Galli, who declined to give specific figures. "We plan to continue to do so going forward." Prada and Gucci, owned by PPR, declined to provide sales forecasts.

______________________

Labels: , , , ,

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Fab Bag of the Day - Coach Hamptons Hobo

We're really loving all of the jewel-toned colors this season, like today's featured designer handbag from COACH which comes in a vibrant blue and can't help but get noticed. This particular shade of blue reminds us of azure waters and beaches and the functional hobo shape makes us want to carry it everyday!

COACH designer handbag hamptons large blue hobo. Measures approximately 17 W x 10 H with a 3.5 depth. Strap measures about 16 inches long with a 10 inch drop. Zip top closure. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag.

Click here to shop authentic COACH handbags at up to 60% off!

_______________

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, October 01, 2007

Sweetening The Purse

Reed Krakoff Has Carried Coach to a Highly Profitable Realm

By Robin Givhan
Monday, September 3, 2007
Washington Post Staff Writer

Before there was flushed-faced longing for Balenciaga shoulder bags and status in carrying a Chloe Paddington, before Miuccia Prada transformed a nylon backpack into a symbol of wealth or the Fendi baguette became a plot point on "Sex and the City," there were Coach handbags.

Understated, sturdy and utterly lacking in sex appeal, Coach bags are known for being indestructible. Even today, longtime fans tell of decades-old bags that are still in use. A 10-year-old briefcase still accompanies one Detoit entrepreneur to the office. Another handbag survived the violent tugging of a mugger and several months lying waterlogged in a trashcan in Washington.

Until recently, Coach's most glamorous moment came in 1980 when the bags were cited in "The Official Preppy Handbook" -- and throngs of preppy wannabes started carrying Duffle Sacs and popping the collars on their Lacoste shirts.

But in the past 10 years, Coach has become one of the fashion industry's most dynamic success stories. While new designer names such as Proenza Schouler and Zac Posen paint glamorous fantasies, Coach occupies a highly profitable reality.

With the arrival of its first creative director, Reed Krakoff, in January 1997, Coach began to transform itself from a $500 million manufacturer of reliable and tasteful purses into a $2.6 billion company that has its name on shoes, furniture, luggage, outerwear and, most important, bags. They represent 56 percent of the company's business.

The typical consumer would be forgiven for assuming that handbags are mere flourishes in the fashion economy. But that hasn't been the case for a long time. Accessories appeal to the broadest range of consumers and offer the widest profit margins. It's the hobo bags that rake in the big bucks, not the boho skirts.

The company, founded in 1941, has experienced double-digit growth over the last 10 years. Much of that growth has been due to Krakoff's ability to translate imprecise notions about American style, classic silhouettes and a modern sensibility into products, transforming Coach from a utilitarian purchase into a fashion one.

"Brands are like people," Krakoff says. "They have tendencies, things they will do and things they can't do."

Like a lot of his customers, Krakoff, 43, grew up in Connecticut at a time when Coach epitomized East Coast preppy style. Women he knew carried Coach Duffle Sacs. He had a Coach wallet. And Krakoff had been steeped in the marketing of Americana after spending more than a dozen years working for designers Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger.

In price, the company's handbags are situated between the fancy designer bags that typically start at about $1,000 and the mass market handbags, from companies such as Nine West, that top out at $100 or so. The average sale in a Coach store is $325. Depending on one's income and point of view, Coach manages to be both a luxury and a bargain.

"Coach bags look and feel substantial, and they last as long as you want them to," writes Karen Pierce, 41, a Washington lawyer, in an e-mail. "I noticed a few years ago that the look was different -- more colors, more details, more style. . . . I also like the price point -- it's reasonable for the quality and the look, especially compared to higher-end designer bags."

This summer, New York's ready-to-wear designers prepared their spring 2008 collections for the runway shows that begin Wednesday. If they are lucky, the clothes will appeal to that tiny percentage of customers who have made peace with spending $800 or more on a day dress. Krakoff spent his summer focused on the needs of everyone else.

On a sticky June afternoon, in an over-air-conditioned loft in Chelsea Piers, Krakoff is alternately scrutinizing Polaroid pictures and hunched over a large-format camera. He is photographing the company's holiday advertising campaign -- dubbed "Bleecker," after the Manhattan street where the company is opening one of two boutiques that will be focused on fashion bags and limited-edition ones.

When Krakoff first came to Coach, he hired pedigreed fashion photographers such as Mario Testino for this kind of work. But since he began studying photography about two years ago at Parsons, where he also received a degree in fashion design, Krakoff has been doing it himself. From reinterpreting and modernizing an established brand's sensibility to directing the advertising campaign, Krakoff is a middle-market version of Chanel's Karl Lagerfeld.

The company's ads have livened up significantly from the early days when they celebrated American cultural history with sober shots of famous scions -- Gary Cooper's daughter, a descendant of Mark Twain -- with their favorite Coach products.

Now Krakoff is standing in front of four long-limbed young models draped in Coach handbags, hats and scarves. They are heavily styled with white tights and wedge heels, cellophane corsages and picture hats adorned with giant protruding feathers. Nothing about the image suggests utilitarian. It screams fashion.

Also on the set is a 3-year-old Jack Russell terrier named Finney, decked out in a tartan print overcoat.

For the current shoot, Krakoff is choosing from a sprawling selection of products atop a maze of tables: handbags, scarves, hats, shoes, gloves and charms. Coach helped popularize the idea of accessorizing one's accessories with charms ranging in price from $28 to $38. (An impulse purchase for some shoppers; an indulgent introduction to the Coach brand for others.) Although Prada has received most of the credit within the fashion industry for mainstreaming this kind of childish charm, Krakoff says his came first.

"We did it three years before them," he says. "We saw them seven years ago in Japan. People were hanging key chains on bags; girls would hang little charms on their cellphones." But he stops short of being bothered. "I would sound silly saying, 'I invented the key fob.' We're really not about starting trends. I really don't care."

Some fashion snobs deride Coach, unable to deal with the idea that a handbag so readily accessible, so vaguely democratic, could also be so desirable. They dismiss it as a starter bag -- and an ugly bag. The Web site Bagsnob.com, which offers critical assessments of new handbags, showed no mercy in critiquing Coach's patchwork bags. "I know I sound like a total snob when I say that I cringe when I have to walk by a Coach store. . . . The other day . . . I inadvertently stopped in front of a Coach store. I looked up and was assaulted by a wall to wall display of their hideous patchwork bags! I almost passed out and wanted to run but could not tear my eyes away from these deformed-looking bags!"

Of that review, Krakoff responds: "I'm okay with that. We can't please everybody. We're here to please the customer."

Kibibi Springs, 34, is an extremely happy customer. She remembers her first Coach bag: a black suede Duffle Sac purchased in 1995. She still uses it. "They should keep up the good work. I think they have a great brand," she says.

"When I think of Coach, I think it's classic but also on trend without being trendy," says the Los Angeles-based Springs, who works in marketing for the entertainment industry. She shops across the spectrum from high-end designers to mass merchants. She says Coach gets the seasonal colors right, the patterns. But the lines are classic. "It's not a toss-away item."

Coach customers like patchwork. They like charms. And they like the Coach logo-print fabric with its pattern of stylized C's, although Krakoff says it isn't a logo at all, which is a bit like having someone say that it's not raining even as you're standing outside getting drenched.

"One of the things we've done with the logo is reinterpreted it with patterns in abstraction," he says. "It's just become a material."

Defining Luxury

In Krakoff's office, which is not on Seventh Avenue but on far West 34th Street in the shadow of the Golden Arches, a black Louise Nevelson labyrinthine sculpture covers one wall. As he speaks, he unpacks a large box containing the components of a stone mantelpiece that has the weathered look of old wealth and grandeur.

It is evidence of Krakoff's million-dollar lifestyle. He owns a Manhattan townhouse, a summer home in the Hamptons and various works of important art.

Krakoff, who is married and has four children, is a tall, lean man with buzz-cut dark hair. He favors slim, dark-washed jeans, oxford shirts and leather oxfords worn without socks. He has a dry wit and is given to the kind of emotionless analysis of the fashion business that one might find in a loan officer. Perhaps that comes from having degrees in both economics and fine arts from Tuffts.

He sniffs with skepticism at labels, particularly European ones, that put a price tag of almost $2,000 on a handbag. "Knowing what it costs to make a bag -- " he begins. And then pauses. Disgusted. Some of the cost is based on status, some of it is because of small-scale production. "But we use the same raw materials," he says. He firmly believes that Coach is a luxury brand.

"Luxury is personal," he says. "It's old-fashioned to think that it has to be made a certain way." Or in a certain country. Or by unionized labor.

Luxury is not related to hand-sewing, he says, or a label that says "Made in Italy." "Truthfully, I look at a lot of bags, and it's not where it's made but who makes it. I think the European brands have been pushing that because it's the only way to justify $9,000 for a bag."

Coach's manufacturing used to be centered in New York. The prototypes are still made here, but the production now takes place all over the world.

Krakoff's flights of fantasy, were he to have any, are tempered by a pragmatic nature.

"Intuitively, I was always that kind of person," Krakoff says. "I knew I'd never be a tortured cr?ateur doing couture."

Like most designers, Krakoff trusts his gut instincts. But he does not give in fully to the idea that a designer must tell consumers what they want to buy next. Occasionally, shoppers already know. Coach conducts market research. It organizes focus groups. The company doesn't allow a clutch of homemakers or Type-A strivers behind one-way glass dictate design, but it listens.

The major drawback to focus groups, Krakoff says, has to do with the momentum of a group. "If someone in the group says, 'I don't like it,' there tends to be a gang mentality. If we research winter bags in summer, people say they're too heavy or too dark.

"It's not a science. The research helps us understand better how things are going to do," he says. "The trick is not to be too literal."

Sometimes, the best research, Krakoff says, is "if I walk into a room with a bag and no one says anything. It probably isn't a good bag."

Money Bags


Walking into a Coach store provides an immediate sense of the diversity of the customers. There are professional women looking for work bags, teenagers buying tiny hobo styles and indulgent shoppers choosing a $398 tote for a gym bag.

"They always have pretty colors for the spring season," says Celeste Schreier, a 15-year-old Coach fan in Michigan who favors shades of pink and has a stash of Coach bags in her closet, including a white one with multicolored C's from her bat mitzvah. "I like having a bunch so I have different options."

How many bags can people buy?

In fiscal 2007, Coach net sales were up by 28 percent over the previous year. The company expects sales in 2008 to top $3 billion. And Karen Pierce, the Washington lawyer, has her eye on a new black Hamptons satchel.

___________________

Labels: , , , ,