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Sunday, January 20, 2008

Fab Bag of the Day - Fendi Crossword Clutch


If you are into high fashion like we are, you will love this FENDI clutch. It may not be practical for an everyday handbag but it's the perfect designer handbag to take for out a night or shopping on the weekends. The crossword design and polished silver hardware is different and one-of-a-kind. FENDI designer handbag measures approximately 12 W x 6 H with a 2 inch depth. Zip to closure. One pocket with the metal Fendi logo.

Click here to shop this authentic FENDI handbag at 11% off.

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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, October 10, 2007

The Fendi Handbag - Find One On Sale

by Tori A Hewitt
What do you think of when you hear the name Fendi? Fashion? Quality? Timeless Elegance? Long recognized as a trend setter in the world of high fashion, Fendi symbolizes the highest quality in craftsmanship, painstaking attention to detail and only the most fashionable of clothing and accessories.


The Baguette is most widely recognized and coveted Fendi handbag. The vintage Baguette is a Fendi handbag that is part of the pop culture of the 1990s, believed by some to be a cult object and seen by others as a status symbol. However you see the Fendi Baguette, you must agree that it is a well recognized icon in the realm of designer accessories.Part of the appeal of the Fendi Baguette lies with its great simplicity. The short shoulder strap was a unique and revolutionary design at the time the Fendi Baguette was brought to market, and the name is so appropriate to the way the Fendi handbag is carried.

The association between carrying the handbag under ones arm to the manner in which the French tend to carry their loaves of baguette bread implies both elegance and comedy.Even though the Baguette may be the most widely recognized of Fendi handbags, Fendi has a comprehensive and diverse line of designer handbags.

There are more than 100 handbags available in the current Fendi handbag line, and they range in price from $175 to more than $1,000.The least expensive Fendi handbag is the Zucca Brown Handbag, which is both simple and practical. The retail price on this bag is $450, but it can regularly be found at the discount rate of $175.


Even though this Fend handbag is at the low end of the Fendi price spectrum, it is a high-quality handbag made with the excellent craftsmanship for which Fendi is famous.At the other extreme of the price range lies the Fendi designer FF monogram canvas shearling trim designer purse. Costing more than $1,000, this Fendi handbag is made of a combination of the highest leather with FF monogram canvas and features engraved hardware. Additional features include a full interior lining with a pocket.

There are numerous other Fendi handbags available between these two extremes of the pricing spectrum. When you decide to invest in a Fendi handbag, you will be purchasing a superior quality and highly fashionable elegant handbag that will likely last for a lifetime.
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Friday, September 28, 2007

Fendi's charmed circle; Dolce & Gabbana come into the light


By Suzy Menkes
Published: September 27, 2007


MILAN: A liquid softness, translucent fabrics, bigger volumes, long, full hemlines and artistic prints - as the Milan shows draw to a close, that is the point of view of designers who all seem to be striving for a modern romance.

When Karl Lagerfeld talks of the "birth of the day" and its streaks of dawn pink and pale blue, referring to the soft hues in his Fendi show, you know that times are changing. Likewise, Dolce & Gabbana exchanged sirens of the night for sylphs of summer as the designers' more familiar heavy metal and sultry sex were eclipsed by artsy flowers.

This surprising consensus among disparate designers is what we call fashion. And if their proposals are acceptable to women, there will be a change of mood and of silhouette for spring/summer 2008.

The Fendi show was celebrating, in discreet style, 10 years of the Baguette bag, which Silvia Venturini Fendi described as "timeless," saying: "I think the Baguette deserves a longer life than an 'It' bag."
For the show, against the canvas of Lagerfeld's semi-sheer mid-calf dresses, worked on a circle format, the Baguette bags were shown in varying sizes and decorated with big raindrops of beads and inset snakeskin clouds to go with the overall watery theme. That was reinforced by liquid flowing through looping pipes on both the backdrop and runway.

Fendi's charmed circle; Dolce & Gabbana come into the lightCoping with celebrity, the red carpet character testPrivate equity firms ready to cash in on luxury brandsThe idea was worked both in - and on - the graceful dresses, some with a perfect round of sleeve or collars; others with circle prints that Lagerfeld called "controlled graphics," inspired by the work of the DaDa artist François Picabia. "I was in the mood for print but didn't want flowers, so I thought of a rainbow," said Lagerfeld to explain how the arc turned into a circle.
Why did this cultured, elegant and well-thought out Fendi collection miss out on the emotional charge fundamental to a great show? Like a square peg in a round hole, Lagerfeld's transformation from a designer of sharp lines and silhouettes to a sweeter softness seemed slightly forced, although he played a masterly game of angular against circular, with geometric pieces buckling a circle of a belt.

The mid-calf dresses, white and semi-opaque, worn over shorts, caught a sporty modernity. But other dresses, especially those with soft gray and pink patterns, looked almost like a 1950s revival. But it was a good show with a clear vision. And that circle is going to play perfectly in China, where Fendi is off to do a show on the Great Wall and where, with serendipity, a circle symbolizes happiness.

It was a happy fashion moment to see Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana emerge from their dark, sharp club world and move on. The show started with paintbrushes dabbling on silk, running rivulets of color with Jackson Pollock enthusiasm to create bold, abstract flowers. From the small screen to the big stage as the video of work-in-progress in the Dolce & Gabbana studio morphed into the artistically patterned dresses spreading skirts like modern art canvases across the runway.

This was Dolce & Gabbana light - airy bubbles of skirts, caging nets of fabric, bouncy short hemlines and artsy evening gowns echoing Christian Lacroix in his haute pouf heyday.

But this colorful show was also about light in a different sense. The design duo let daylight in on their nighttime party clothes, moving into a parallel universe where women step out in pants and a gauzy shirt, swinging a flat bag (itself an artistic object) with a smaller purse attached. They even allowed themselves to show a lean pantsuit, displaying their tailoring side that has been idling for a while.

The main change in silhouette was that, as elsewhere in Milan, things had loosened up, moving away from last season's clinging sexiness with shiny metallic accessories. No one has ever doubted that Dolce & Gabbana had a more romantic side, and it was a wise move to turn to that sweeter register.

Even the footwear veered between not-too-high heels on laced shoes and summer flats. Not everything worked. A dress with a braiding of drapes looked like a fitted dress suddenly come undone. And some of the evening ball poufs were pure theater.

But the flowers were oh-so-pretty! - from sweet wisteria and orchids to more abstract dabs. They were a metaphor for the change in spirit from pert to pastoral. A slightly heavier theme reflected the flocked wallpaper of the backdrop and produced velvet brocades of William Morris-style patterns. But the overall result was of charming dresses that were mostly wearable and covetable.

Pucci does Cheyenne on a road trip down Route 66? Now that sounds like an unlikely fashion destination for the aristocratic Emilio. But with desert sand and coral colors - not the least of which was on the neon-patterned backdrop - the designer Matthew Williamson created a refreshing take Thursday on Emilio Pucci's noble heritage.

The designer's own boho instincts draw him toward a 1970s aesthetic. But this show was not so much retro as ethnic American in a hyper-sophisticated way, right down to feather pieces dangling from curving platform sandals. A chamois leather jacket, with a snakeskin mosaic of Pucci patterns, was a standout piece with Western influence.

But Williamson did not go wild for the West - apart from those sunset and sandstorm colors. "I was inspired by the archives and the boxy shapes Emilio did," said the designer, referring to square-cut dresses filled with geometric patterns that were in line with the general widening of shapes.

Since a little of Pucci pattern goes a long way, a sand-yellow suit, cinched with a wide belt, or a long, draped dress in solid colors of pink and orange gave a break from the prints. A chamois dress with the pattern cut like a doily into the suede was a master work - but not necessarily as desirable as a square-cut sweater worn with a pair of sloppy pants. Pucci could do with more simple sportswear pieces, which Williamson offers only as seductive swimwear.

But the British designer is making a good, straightforward job with brand Pucci - and there was one very satisfied client. The Pucci board member Delphine Arnault Gancia, of the LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton dynasty, wore a simple dress with a big history. The print was first designed for Marilyn Monroe but re-colored by Williamson. Just one of the ways that the designer is modernizing Pucci and giving it new life.
Suzy Menkes is fashion editor at the International Herald Tribune.
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Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Fab Bag of the Day - Fendi B Bag


We know summer is over but we thought we'd featured this stunning FENDI B BAG to pay homage to one of our favorite seasons of the year. FENDI B BAG in natural canvas with red patent leather straps and trim measures approximately 12 W x 8 H with a 4 inch depth. Strap handle measures about 21 inches long with an 8.5 inch drop. Gunmetal hardware. Flap over top with a tuck-in closure. Comes with sleeper bag. Guaranteed authentic.

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




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