Tuesday, October 7, 2008

 

Trendy Coach Handbags

By Scott Nichols


Coach handbags are a hot product these days. Coach handbags are fashionable and are also very practical. Since many women often find themselves overwhelmed with things to carry along with them each day, Coach has risen to the challenge by creating handbags that are also multipurpose carryalls.

Coach handbags are quality products with a reputable name standing behind them. Coach handbags are large and roomy, yet still highly fashionable and in great demand. Coach handbags come in a variety of styles, colors and materials. All are appropriately decorated and very durable.

One of the most popular styles made by Coach today is the hobo handbag. The hobo is a classic and functional style that women love. Coach manufactures its handbags from quality materials with detailed craftsmanship. With all of these advantages, it’s no wonder that Coach handbags are so popular.

Coach also makes a handbag called the Hamptons. This Coach handbag is a clutch style handbag that is more traditional in its design. However, many women prefer Coach’s extra large tote bag. This Coach handbag can carry books if you’re a student and all of your take home work if you’ve entered the world of employment. Coach also makes a pouch style bag and a swing style. There’s something for every woman.

Coach has expanded its line to include a variety of accessories that include wallets, key chains, card cases, checkbook covers and camera bags. Coach also offers a French purse and mini wallet. Coach has become known as a quality designer that manufactures a quality product. With more than style in mind, Coach appeals to a wide range of women who each have a different use for their handbags.

Owning a Coach handbag is not merely a fashion statement, however. Any woman who is interested in quality, functionality and affordability should consider a Coach handbag. Coach, as one of the most popular handbag and accessory line on the market today, offers a wide array of great products.

Since Coach is so popular, Coach handbags are often copied. It is easy to find a less expensive brand that has a bag that may look a lot like a Coach handbag. However, it’s not just style and fashion that are important. Coach handbags are made to an exact quality specification using quality materials. Quality is infused into every inch of a Coach handbag, from the exterior leathers and fabrics, to the linings and the decorative accoutrement.

Find more Helpful handbags tips, advice (and Resources) Click Here: http://www.handbagsonsalenow.com A Popular website that specializes in Sources of Handbags to include Discount Designer Handbag, Wholesale Handbags and Authentic Gucci Handbag

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/

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Thursday, May 22, 2008

 

You Can Have Your Own Chanel Handbag Collection


Authentic Vintage Chanel Caviar Handbag

By Eli Del

Aaaah, Chanel handbags. Is there anything more soft, more classic and more exciting than an authentic Chanel bag? The answer is, unequivocally, no. Most of the women that we know either have one Chanel or they don't think that they can afford one and just wish they had one. Well, it does not matter which category you fall in... we are here to tell you that you
can afford these glorious collector's items and you should start collecting right away!

So, let's talk about authentic vintage Chanel handbags. You might be wondering why this is the first step towards a Chanel handbag collection? Well, there is a simple and important answer to this question. Like most collector's items, Chanel bags increase in value as they age. To add even more value, Chanel designs are classic and timeless, so you can get at least 20 years of usage out of them before you hand them down to your children or sell them for at least twice of what you bought it for! Yes, it's true... you will double your initial investment when you sell your authentic Chanel handbag!

Another important factor to take into consideration when you start browsing and purchasing Chanel bags is to make sure that the bags are authentic! If an online vendor is selling these designer bags at prices that are too good to be true, the purses are not real! There are hundreds of factories that are taking original Chanel designs and knocking them off. These replicas will not increase in value and will still cost you a couple hundred dollars, so do not buy a fake Chanel and make sure that the authenticity of your bag is guaranteed!

Now that you know that your investment will double and that you need to confirm that the Chanel handbag is authentic, it's time for you to start shopping! We know that spending thousands of dollars on a handbag is not realistic for many women, so we have made it our goal to find the best sales online! This way we can continue adding to our Chanel handbag collection without breaking the bank and we can help other women do the same! Some of the bags are still over one thousand dollars, but we have been able to find some beautiful ones that are only a couple hundred dollars!

Check out the amazing sales that we have found an have a blast collecting authentic Chanel handbags!

Take advantage of these Chanel deals and you will have the best collection in town!!

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

 

Fashion special: Still crazy about Coco



The Independent

Chanel revolutionised women’s fashion, and 25 years after Karl Lagerfeld took over, the label is as iconic as ever, says Susannah Frankel

Ask Karl Lagerfeld to sum up – in only 10 words – the power of Chanel and it's no great surprise when the great couturier, who, let's face it, is far from a shrinking violet where his dealings with the media are concerned, comes back with a rather longer answer than that.

Chanel encapsulates the idea of "modernity" first and foremost, he says. It embodies "a contemporary attitude – whatever the time or the decade". Chanel also stands for "luxury" and "the power of the logo". The iconic double C branding is surely the most instantly recognisable in fashion history. Also, for Chanel, read "the power of the handbag – the most famous in the world". Lagerfeld speaks here of the 2.55 in particular, named after its date of birth in February 1955, quilted, to keep its shape and echoing the texture of classic British outerwear, originally favoured by jockeys. (Chanel, for her part, favoured jockeys in return, but more of that later.) Suspended from a gilt shoulder strap, this was the first purse designed for a woman ensuring her hands were free.

The white camellia, too, says Lagerfeld, is an integral part of the story. It was Chanel's favourite flower and her successor has, in the past, coloured it every which way, on one particularly memorable occasion, even casting it in diamonds the size of boiled sweets as the single closure to a perfectly cut Chanel haute- couture jacket. "I also love camellias," Lagerfeld goes on to confirm, "and gardenias. But I love old-style-looking roses too, like the ones you can only find in Paris at Odorantes in Rue Madame." The black ribbon bow – today a staple of every couture catwalk and no longer just Chanel's own – is treated with similar diversity. "We do this in all kinds of shapes, colours and materials," Lagerfeld says.

Perhaps more significantly, the Chanel name stands also for "timelessness, but for fashion at the same time" – while the recipe may be updated each season in line with the mood of the moment, the main ingredients remain the same – and for "the two-tone shoe, not only the pump but also 'the ballerina' and so forth". Chanel gave this to the world in 1957 – the first pair had a sling-back – in beige with a black tip, which has the miraculous effect of foreshortening the foot and lengthening the leg. Then, continues Lagerfeld, there's "the magic address: 31 Rue Cambon". Chanel set up shop as a milliner in that very street in Paris for the first time in 1910. The plaque on the door originally read "Chanel Modes". Although it is now significantly expanded, it remains the company's headquarters to this day.

Lagerfeld goes on to cite "the mystery of the Coromandel screens she loved and which have inspired her": it is the stuff of fashion folklore that Chanel was always surrounded and indeed shielded by particularly fine examples of these. Finally, the world has Chanel to thank for "the mixing of real and fake jewellery and the invention of fashion costume jewellery", enjoying something of a resurgence just now, incidentally, as seen at the most recent round of international collections everywhere from Balenciaga to Lanvin and from Louis Vuitton to, well, Chanel. True to her unusually democratic stance, Chanel herself thought nothing of mixing diamonds and paste, real pearls with great ropes of more reasonably priced approximations. She wore them well and today Lagerfeld embellishes everything from sunglasses to handbags with more of the same.

"You see," Lagerfeld argues with an energy and enthusiasm that belie his 74 years, "here are already 12 reasons and you asked for 10... That shows the power – and the staying power – of Chanel. The image, the fashion and the idea of the woman herself as the first modern one. It is the idea of modernity, a life and a lifestyle that women can identify with."

It is now 25 years since Lagerfeld took to the helm of France's most famous fashion house. Chanel died in January 1971 and it seemed only decent that a good decade should go by before anyone dared to step into her perfectly formed, not to mention supremely influential shoes. While contemporary fashion is elsewhere characterised by an increasingly high-profile – and at times inept – game of designer musical chairs where the revival of potentially lucrative status labels is concerned, it is worth noting that Chanel has remained unswervingly faithful to Karl Lagerfeld – by now the greatest couturier still practising the craft – and Karl Lagerfeld has stayed true to Chanel – today fashion's best-known name. Upon hearing news of his contemporary Valentino's retirement announced in the autumn of last year, Lagerfeld said: "I am not very pleased because I think it is not good that he's stopping; he is in great shape. He should continue. It's no fun; he'll be bored."

Although Lagerfeld is the man at the helm of the Chanel brand today, it all began in the hands of the house's namesake, whose life story is as much a part of the label's many signatures as a gilt chain is to the hem of the jacket of a Chanel bouclé wool suit. If anyone might reasonably be described as an autobiographical designer it is Chanel, after all. Even the lining of the aforementioned 2.55 bag is coloured garnet – mimicking, by all accounts, that of the uniform she wore at the convent where she spent her early years.

Equally important is that Chanel's desire to create clothes sprang above all from her wish to dress herself in a manner she saw fit. She was nothing if not reactionary. "If I embarked on this profession it was precisely to make everything I didn't like unfashionable," she once said and she lived and worked by that rule tirelessly. Whichever way one chooses to look at it, the romance of this, perhaps the ultimate rags-to-riches tale, is unprecedented. With this in mind, it is small wonder that, almost 40 years after her death, not one but two Chanel movies begin filming this year: Audrey Tautou will play the young designer in Coco avant Chanel, directed by Anne Fontaine, and devoted to her young life; and Marina Hands (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly) is set to play the lead in Coco & Igor, directed by William Friedkin and telling the story of Chanel's relationship with the composer Stravinsky. Potentially less chic is a forthcoming TV mini-series starring Shirley MacLaine.

Gabrielle Chanel was born on 19 August 1883 in the French province of Saumur. Her father, Albert Chanel, was a market trader. Her mother, Jeanne Devolle, was of humble origins, bore several children and died young, in 1895, leaving her daughter to be educated by the nuns at an orphanage in Aubazine. Gabrielle was taught how to sew there and, when holidaying with her sisters, learnt the art of millinery – they loved hats. Aged 20 and based in the garrison town of Moulins, Chanel worked as an assistant in a shop specialising in trousseaux and layettes and then as a seamstress. By night she sang for her supper in cafés and bars and it was there that the slim, slight, dark-haired, black-eyed figure first became known as Coco.

In the early years of the 20th century, Coco Chanel moved in with Etienne Balsan, a famous horse breeder, and although not accepted by the elevated echelons of society in which he circulated, she became an accomplished horse woman and among the first of her sex to dare to wear jodhpurs. In order to deflect the received ideas of a mistress, dressed in the requisite frills and furbelows of the Belle Epoque style, Chanel set to adapting the staples of menswear to her needs, often scandalising others in her entourage by actually wearing men's clothing. "A woman is always over-dressed and never sufficiently elegant," she said later and few did more to correct that fact than Chanel. Her uniform of strictly tailored, unembellished garments topped with nothing more frothy than a straw boater caught on and it wasn't long before she was making hats, in particular, for her friends.

In her mid-twenties, Chanel was befriended by an English industrialist, the renowned polo player Arthur "Boy" Capel, who duly installed her in an apartment in Paris where she became his lover and began making hats on a more professional basis. By 1910, interest in her minimal and profoundly modern designs was such that she had outgrown this space and opened a shop at Rue Cambon, naming it Chanel Modes. It wasn't long before she had expanded her operation to include a store in Deauville selling clothes as well as hats, and then a fully fledged couture house in Biarritz where, by 1916, she was responsible for 300 employees all dedicated to the task of creating naturally feminine and relatively simple clothing, favouring freedom of movement and rejecting anything even remotely ostentatious or superfluous.

Across the Atlantic – and the American market was as important then as it is today – US Harper's Bazaar picked up on her success, publishing a picture of what they described as "the charming chemise dress", again borrowed from menswear – this time, specifically, a man's shirt. A year later, Chanel cut her lustrous dark hair into a neat bob, the better to suit her naturally androgynous silhouette and sun-tanned skin. Although it is often said that she invented the swimsuit – and it's certainly true that she went on to craft stretch clothing in jersey, formerly the preserve of nothing more haute than men's underwear – here Lagerfeld begs to differ.

"There are no images of Chanel in swimsuits and we know only the heavy bathing-suit costumes she designed for the Ballets Russes' Le Train Bleu," he says. Jean Cocteau also worked on the 1924 production and the collaboration between the fashion designer and the artist, who later also introduced her to Picasso, was to continue for more than 10 years. "But Chanel embodies the idea of the modern women and so she inherited that image too. People think she was the first. In fact she was not, but she is remembered that way. Now sportswear is all over the world and is not only worn for sport. Some sportswear and some sports did not exist in Chanel's time, but they represent something she would have liked if she had known it."

In 1919, Capel, described by Chanel as "the love of her life", was killed in a car crash and she threw herself into her work creating many of the looks that remain the staple of the contemporary woman's wardrobe to this day. In 1926 she designed her first "little black dress", described by Vogue as the fashion equivalent of the Ford motorcar; in 1928 she came up with her first tweed suit. That is not to say that her personal life was anything but colourful. Over the years she was linked to the exiled Russian Grand Duke, Dimitri Pavlovich, related to Tsar Nicholas II, who introduced her to Ernest Beaux (the perfumier with whom she created Chanel No 5) and to the sparkling beauty of baroque jewellery. She was also the lover of the second Duke of Westminster, Hugh "Bendor" Grosvenor, who shared her life for 10 years, demonstrating the potential power of great wealth – he was widely considered the richest man in Europe at that time – and whose aristocratic English wardrobe inspired her work continuously. "Westminster is elegance itself," she once said. "He never has anything new – I had to go out and buy him some shoes. He has been wearing the same jacket for 25 years." Despite the longevity of their relationship, Chanel refused to marry the Duke. "There have been several Duchesses of Westminster," she would say. "There is only one Chanel."

By 1935, Chanel owned five buildings in Rue Cambon, employed 4,000 people and was at the height of her power. In 1939, however, and just before the outbreak of war, she closed her couture house, stating: "I thought there wouldn't be any more dresses." She would, of course, have been able to live out the rest of her days in splendour, profiting from the sale of accessories and fragrance alone. Throughout the Occupation, Chanel spent most of her time at the Paris Ritz where she conducted an affair with a Nazi officer. At the end of the war she was arrested – though not charged – for collaboration and spent the following years in relative obscurity based in Switzerland. And that could have been that.

Some things are not to be, however, and in 1954, at the grand old age of 71 and spurred on at least in part by her rancour at the immense success of Christian Dior's proudly people-pleasing and retrogressive New Look, she began designing couture collections once more. Dior, she said, was "a madman" for wanting to put women back into corsets and overblown skirts. There was nothing for it but to show the world once again how it might be done.

While the French – by then in the thrall of not only Dior but also Cristobal Balenciaga, Pierre Balmain and Jacques Fath – were less than effusive over Chanel's new designs, emancipated American women were more quick on the uptake, viewing her softly tailored jackets, silk blouses and wrap-over skirts as more fitting for women in the latter part of the 20th century than anything her competitors had to offer. It wasn't long before what was described as "The Chanel Look" was restored to its former glory. It upholds its position as purveyor of all that is quintessentially understated and chic to this day.

"I don't remember the first time I saw the Chanel logo," says Lagerfeld – in its original form, the double C was the fastening on the 2.55 bag. "But I noticed it when I took over Chanel, when real logo power started all over the world. For a company it is very important today because, much more than in the past, we all sell in parts of the world where they cannot read our writing or understand our languages. In one part – a very big part – of the world it is all about signs when they write. They can memorise perhaps the famous "CC" but they have difficulties reading the name first. They find out later. In the past we sold mostly to people who knew our culture and could read English or French. Now it is only a part of our clientele. Logos are the Esperanto of marketing, luxury and business today."

And there is perhaps no more potent signifier of luxury than the name of Chanel – from the logo itself to the cosmetic and fragrance lines, accessories and, of course, clothing. Lagerfeld says that these – and he is speaking of the Chanel jacket in particular – have "a staying-power that is difficult to explain".

The secrets of its success are manifold but inextricably linked to the life, times and pioneering spirit of the late Coco Chanel herself. "Many of Chanel's private dicta have entered into the unspoken rules that still govern fashion," wrote Cecil Beaton in The Glass of Fashion, published in 1954. "Though Chanel herself echoed the theory that fashions are never revived, it is a tribute to her rare and remarkable practicality, and an anomaly in the annals of recorded fashion, that few of her innovations became dated."

More than 50 years on, his words continue to resonate, and of that, Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel herself would be proud.

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Sunday, February 17, 2008

 

They made luxury a need

Kiran Yadav
The Financial Express


There is one thing that these people have proved beyond doubt — that it is not impossible to overdo luxury. They are the people who created brands that redefined luxury as they evolved. They moved the benchmark of aspirations and created a class far superior than the ‘elite’. The brands they created need little introduction, but not many really know much about the legends behind them. These are legends who made design a religion.

Did you know that Christian Dior studied to be a political scientist but went on to open a contemporary art gallery showcasing the works of de Chirico, Utrillo, Braque, Fernand Léger and the paintings of friends Max Jacob and Christian Bérard? That was 1928 and Dior was all of 23! It is a difficult task to speculate the role the 1929 stock market crash played in his life. The crash ruined the Dior family’s finances and led him to sketch for various Parisian couture houses. His design illustrations became a regular feature in Figaro. And soon after, in 1938, he was hired as a designer for the house of Robert Piguet. And as they say you cannot hide talent. Five years later, textile tycoon Marcel Boussac decided to finance Christian Dior’s couture house. 30 Avenue, Montaigne has been the House of Dior since. Dior’s first collection, shown on February 12, 1947 in chilly, post-war Paris, was a sensation. His small-waisted, full-skirted silhouette was a symbol of luxurious provocation that made headlines around the world. As did his fur creations and perfumes. Dior died at the age of 52, in 1957. By then the brand had cast its spell on women as stylish and diverse as Marlene Dietrich, Rita Hayworth, Ava Gardner, the Duchess of Windsor and Eva Peron. The spell continues to live though.

In and around the same time, 1921 to be precise, Guccio Gucci opened a leather goods company and a small luggage store in Florence. Years of experience in London’s Savoy Hotel had helped Gucci understand the taste of English nobility. Tuscan craftsmanship in leather coupled with his creativity soon made his equestrian-inspired collection of bags, trunks, gloves, shoes and belts a hit. But as fascism swept Italy in the 1940s, Gucci was faced with a shortage of standard materials. That was when he introduced the iconic “Bamboo Bag.” And when Jackie Kennedy carried the Gucci shoulder bag (known today as the ‘Jackie O’), the brand’s celebrity status was reaffirmed. In fact the classic moccasin with horsebit hardware has become part of the permanent collection at the Costume Institute, Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Wondering when the legendary interlocking double ‘G’ logo came into being? That, interestingly, happened only in the 1960s.

Not far away, in Rome, a young couple opened a small handbag shop and a fur workshop. Their timing couldn’t have been better — the first war had ended and the second phase of industrialisation made the future promising for the Italian middle class. Edoardo and Adele Fendi had to just rely on one more thing to do the rest for them — the quality of their products. Soon, for the Roman bourgeoisie, a trip to “Fendi at the Plebiscito” became a date with a certain prestige. And there was no looking back. In 1946 the couple initiated their five daughters into the family business. The sisters, along with Karl Lagerfield, a rising designer, decided to bring a cultural revolution. Fur was regarded mainly as a status symbol till then — it had to be large, heavy and visible. They experimented with new tanning methods, dyes and varieties and treated it as fabric: cut, woven and inlayed. The “double F” was also born now. In 1969, Fendi added an industrial prêt-a-porter collection to the entirely hand-crafted production of its furs. Its range has far expanded since to include leather, foulards, ties, gloves, sunglasses, jeans, perfumes and home furnishings.

Lacoste is another case in point. Founded in 1933, the brand takes its name after Jean René Lacoste, the world-renowned tennis player and Sports enthusiast. The world’s top tennis player also invented the style of “casual elegance”. To obtain greater freedom of movement and more comfort during his matches, he created a lightweight, open-weave, short-sleeved white knit shirt with a ribbed collar. No prizes for guessing that it was indeed the celebrated Lacoste polo shirt! In 1933, “La Chemise Lacoste” was registered and the shirt that he designed for himself found assembly line. Interestingly, Rene Lacoste was nicknamed the crocodile as the result of a bet. Just before a decisive Davis Cup game in 1927, the Captain of the French team promised to give this young “musketeer” a crocodile skin suitcase if he won the match.

Prompted by the young player’s amazing tenacity on the court, the fans quickly picked up the nickname. So, when the time came to select an emblem for the Lacoste brand, the crocodile was the natural choice. And as the brand claims, they are the first to sport the logo on the outside of the garment — prominently displayed on the chest.

Lauren is a relatively younger brand to appear in this list. Ralph Lauren established the Polo label with its line of neckties in 1967. But Lauren defied convention with that single product. Instead of the narrow ones, he designed wide ties. “I’m not a fashion person. I’m anti-fashion. I don’t like to be part of that world. It’s too transient. I have never been influenced by it. I’m interested in longevity, timelessness, style — not fashion,” Lauren is known to have said. And in ‘78 came his first fragrance for men — Polo.

Most of these legends have rewritten rules. Like Gabrielle Chanel (she took on the nick name Coco after her 1905 performance of the song Qui Qu’ a vu a Coco dans le Trocadero) who used jersey, a fabric that had previously been used only for men’s underwear to make stunning dresses for women when fabric supplies ran low during the First World War. A perfectionist to the core, she is even known to lie on her back on the floor of her salon, checking that every hem was stitched precisely to her specifications.

Now that is what goes into the making of a legend...

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Sunday, January 6, 2008

 

Designer Brands - Chanel Naked Bag


Coined the "naked bag," Karl Lagerfeld created this latest must-have CHANEL handbag with the busy woman in mind. Now you can jet-set without having to worry about being held up at the x-ray machine. Plus if you have nothing to hide, than why not flaunt how fabulous you are. Add a Chanel wallet and lipstick and you are ready to go. With a classic Chanel silouette and chain-link strap, here's one to add to your collection. The Chanel Naked Bag in classic flap front design with a CC turn lock closure measures about 11"L x 7"W x 3" depth.

Click here to shop this authentic CHANEL handbag at 30% off retail price.

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Saturday, January 5, 2008

 

Chanel "naked" purse




by Ellen Warren, Chicago Tribune

How many of us would invite strangers off the street to take a tour of our closets?

Would you follow that up with a gander at the contents of the medicine cabinet? Then, perhaps pull open the dresser drawers for a close inspection of what lurks in the bottom of the underwear drawer. Not likely. Well, think of a woman’s purse as a portable closet. A closet blessedly and firmly shut to all prying eyes. Which is why the popularity of the see-through handbag this season is so very peculiar. From Target to Dolce & Gabbana, the transparent purse is a big seller.

The Chanel “naked bag” shown here was created by one of the chicest designers on the planet, Karl Lagerfeld. He made it in reaction to the airline regulations requiring travelers to put their cosmetics in clear plastic bags. Surely it was just a fashion-y joke, right?

I buy my Baggies in bulk for a few bucks at Jewel but this clear plastic bag, trimmed in white patent calfskin and embellished with the Chanel interlocking Cs, costs $950. The larger model goes for $1250. Setting aside the cost, what would possess anyone to parade their messy ways for all to see?

Even the neatniks among us, after all, carries the embarrassing drugs (Rx only, of course), the occasional used Kleenex and products sufficiently personal that they that still command the euphemism “feminine hygiene.” Why show all that off to passersby, not to mention co-workers and potential boyfriends?

A Chanel rep reveals that among the celebrities who own this purse is a woman so cutting edge that she that she is designated a fashion “muse”—actress Chloe Sevigny. (ed: put two dots over e in chloe) Only a pristine lifestyle admits a purse of this stunning transparency. Is it possible that there are no lint-covered Lifesavers, revealing to-do lists or female necessities jumbled in Ms. Sevigny’s handbag? If so, give her an Emmy for overcoming the inner slob that affects us all. And an Oscar for tidiness.
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eFashionHouse.com is recognized as the top online retailer of off-priced authentic CHANEL handbags & accessories by About.com. For more information, please visit the eFashionHouse.com Press Page - Click Here. CHANEL items are priced as marked at 30% - 60% off retail - everyday prices, no coupon code needed.

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Sunday, December 23, 2007

 

Designer Brands - Chanel Handbags




CHANEL handbag cream quilted lambskin shoulder bag. Soft lamb leather. Double split bottom. Chanel signature quilted lamb leather is the perfect neutral cream color. Chanel handbag has the double flap front closure. Hardware is pewter silver. Engraved CHANEL hardware. CC logo on front closure. Interior is fully lined and there are extra pockets. Shoulder strap is double leather. Chanel handbag measures about 9 x 6 x 2 inches. The shoulder strap is about 22 inches long and has a drop opening of about 9 inches. Comes complete with sleeper bag and cards. Guaranteed authentic. Only one available. Chanel box upon request when available. SKU: B07C12JA55CRM

Click here to shop this authentic CHANEL handbag at 20% off.
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Thursday, December 6, 2007

 

Designer Brands - Online Shopping Bargain




CHANEL designer purses gray fur designer handbags. Absolutely gorgeous gray rabbit fur purse. Adjustable strap is about 29 inches long and 1 inch wide. There is about a 13 inch drop. Handbag measures approximately 8 inch length by 4.25 diameter. Strap has the Chanel name and the CC logo embossed on it. Gray zipper with silver CC metal pull tab. Hardware is polished silver. Interior is fully lined. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with cards and sleeper bag. SKU: B07C05E17GRY

Click here to shop this authentic CHANEL handbag at 20% off.

Online Shopping Bargain for Sale & Final Clearance:

  • Use coupon code OFF20 for an extra 20% off FINAL CLEARANCE items.
  • Use coupon code OFF10 for an extra 10% off all SALE items.
  • Plus, Free Fedex to Lower 48 States $200 orders & NO Sales Tax World Wide!
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Saturday, December 1, 2007

 

Designer Brands - Online Shopping Bargain



CHANEL designer handbags light beige large travel tote. Monogrammed CC handbag with beige leather handles and trim. Measures approximately 14 W x 13 H with a 5 inch depth. The leather straps measure about 24 inches long with an 8 inch drop. Zip top closure. Fully lined interior with two zippered pockets. Four metal feet with Chanel Paris embossed on them. Comes with sleeper bag. Guaranteed authentic. SKU: B07C10D02BG

Click here to shop this authentic Chanel tote at 34% retail off!

Online Shopping Bargain for Sale & Final Clearance:

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Wednesday, November 14, 2007

 

Designer Brands - Online Shopping Bargain




CHANEL designer jewelry white pearl necklace with gold metal bow with inlaid pearls and cut stones. Pearl necklace measures approximately 54 inches long. The bow is 2 inches long. The necklace has three gold orbs with pearls and cut stone inlays as well as the interlocking CC logo. There is a three inch metal hanging chain with the CC logo. Comes in black Chanel box. Guaranteed authentic.

Online Shopping Bargain for Sale & Final Clearance:
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Tuesday, November 13, 2007

 

Designer Handbags a big hit for holiday shoppers again this year!




Here's an interesting article written by Tom Braithwaite of Financial Times (FT.com). It covers holiday '07 shopping predictions for luxury fashion brands, luxury items, designer handbags and shoes. We certainly would like the prediction to be correct. It is based on a survey conducted by Deloitte.


Etailers, retailers and resellers of designer handbags and shoes will be delighted if the Financial Time survery is correct. Online shopping and the designer luxury business as a whole has increased steadily over the past several years. We do not anticipate this to fade or go away soon.


More people are migrating to the Internet for convenience, comfort, safety, security and convenience. When was the last time you placed an online order at 3 a.m and had it delivered to your door within 24-48 hours? Happy holiday shopping!


Big spenders plan a designer Christmas

by Tom Braithwaite of Financial Times (FT.com)

Luxury items are in hot demand this Christmas as consumers shrug off the cooling housing market, interest rate rises and credit squeeze to splurge on designer handbags and fine wine. Research published on Tuesday by Deloitte, the consultancy, suggests resilient consumer attitudes in the run-up to Christmas – particularly for luxury products – but warns that the determination to spend on the festive period could lead to a painful hangover in the new year.


Some 19 per cent of consumers intend to purchase a designer handbag or shoes, according to a survey of 1,000 adults, while 16 per cent plan to buy food from a farmers’ market – which compares with 6 per cent purchasing upmarket foods last Christmas. “The rich are getting richer at a faster rate than the less well-off,” said Tarlok Teji, analyst at Deloitte. “There is an underlying trend for ‘premiumisation’, or trading up.” In all, consumers intend to spend 7 per cent more on Christmas gifts, socialising and food and drink, the report found.


Price has also diminished in importance for shoppers deciding where to shop. In 2005 some 37 per cent of consumers listed price as a main reason for choosing a particular store; last year it fell to 23 per cent and fell further to 20 per cent this year. “Value for money” has declined as a reason over the same period, while “convenience” has risen from 50 per cent of shoppers in 2005 to 62 per cent this year – evidence, according to Deloitte, of our so-called “cash rich, time poor” society.


Deloitte decided to repeat its survey this year after concerns that spending would be hit by the credit squeeze. But the November survey differs little from the September version, finding that consumers intend to spend an average of £706 compared with £662 a year earlier, or £33.6bn overall. But Mr Teji warned that, although Christmas should defy doom merchants, the following months might tell a different story: “It could be the last hurrah before ... a downward trend.” One company more sensitive than most to a potential retail hangover is Majestic Wine, which reported interim results on Monday.


Tim How, chief executive, noted “challenging” trading conditions, but said customers’ thirst for fine wines was continuing unabated. “Last week somebody in our Mayfair store bought an Imperial [6 litres] Latour 88” for £2,500, he said. If growing expectations of a serious slowdown do become reality, retailers are aiming to supply so-called luxury products for less.


Asda intends to make “the inaffordable affordable” by selling cheap truffles grown on a farm in Pontefract, Yorkshire. The only catch is that there will be a three- to five-year wait before the truffles will be ready to be harvested. In the meantime, luxury lovers who have fallen on hard times can rely on Lidl, the German discount chain that has been supplying cheap food to the UK since 1994. For a second Christmas, Lidl’s lobsters are selling for less than £5 each.

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Monday, November 12, 2007

 

About.com recognizes eFashionHouse as the top of three online retailers of authentic Chanel





eFashionhouse.com recognized for selling authentic Chanel handbags at below retail prices.


Desert Hot Springs, CA (PRWEB) October 28, 2007 – Although Chanel is one of the most coveted and sought after designer handbag brands in the world, it is often hard to find Chanel handbags at affordable prices – authentic Chanel handbags that is. About.com recently recognized eFashionhouse.com, named “Best of the Web” by People Magazine StyleWatch for discount designer handbags, as the top of three online retailers for authentic Chanel bags.


As an online retailer of authentic Chanel handbags for 12 years, eFashionHouse.com prides itself on sourcing 100% authentic, new and vintage Chanel handbags in various styles, from the undeniable quilted lambskin to chic shearling, and reselling them at below retail prices (up to 50% off retail!).


“We are one of the few online retailers that carry authentic Chanel handbags and have been for years, which is why we were so happy when About.com recognized us as one of the top three retailers.” says Anna Miller, CEO of eFashionHouse.com. “Actually Chanel handbags are often the hardest to find but the most coveted designer, which is not surprising but exactly the reason why we love to offer our customers the authentic Chanel bags at huge discounts.”


eFashionhouse.com has been named “Best of the Web” by People magazine StyleWatch and has been featured in StyleWatch numerous times because they offer the hottest designer handbag brands – Chloe, Chanel, Marc Jacobs, Gucci, Prada, Tods, Dior and more – all authentic and at below retail prices.


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 Fall 2006 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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Sunday, November 11, 2007

 

Classic Chanel Handbags: The First Chanel Handbags



from high-fashion.be
Although Coco began with hats and clothing, designer handbags were a natural progression. A purse is an extension of a woman’s wardrobe, along with her shoes and perfume. Chanel handbags are an expansion of the Chanel fashions, with the same traditions being incorporated into the bags’ designs.


With matching fabrics, trims and fine details, the first Chanel handbags were a classic fit to the rest of the brand. When a woman in the early 1900s would dress, she could easily create a matched outfit complete with her Chanel clothes and accessories.


The Little Black Bag It is no surprise that when Chanel invented the “Little Black Dress” along with it came the “Little Black Bag.” Then, when she expanded her costume jewelry line, her handbags began to be accessorized with gold chains clasps and jeweled buttons.


Her signature bag become the black handbag with the gold chain shoulder strap, Coco herself never left the house without it. Along with her liberation of women through clothing, Coco also incorporated this mission within her handbag collection. In the 1930s, she created the first handbag that could hang on a woman’s shoulder. With the idea that freeing a woman’s hand movements would free her personality, the first shoulder bag was born. The Chanel shoulder bag had a slow beginning, but really took off in the 1950s.At this time, Chanel re-released a slimmed down, squared and quilted shoulder bag version, which became an instant status symbol for the next fifty years.

Chanel Bags Today In many ways, today’s Chanel handbags have changed very little. The timeless fashion of a Chanel bag highlights the collection of many purse enthusiasts. Aspects of the original bags that have been maintained are: The original quilted leather. The textured fabrics. The chains. The signature symbol of two CC's. With a classic and ageless appearance, the Chanel collection for fall 2006 still offers similar trends to history, from tweeds to chains, -- and always a “little black bag.” The product line is limited and only varies slightly with each new season.


Chanel Reporter handbags have been around for quite some time and remain one of the most popular styles of Chanel handbags. Out of all of the Chanel handbags that are available on the market now and have been in the past, the Reporter handbag is one of the most widely recognized, even by those that do not own a single Chanel bag. While the Reporter bag changes slightly from year to year, it has remained largely the same because it has been so successful and seems to have a very wide appeal stretching even to those that do not typically buy designer handbags.


If you aren't quite sure what Chanel Reporter handbags are or how to distinguish them from other Chanel handbags, they are commonly described as the puffy looking bags with several pockets. The look is understated by stylized at the same time. Many of the bags have an almost quilted look, although that would be quilted leather, far from anything that you would put on your bed to sleep with! Chanel Reporter handbags are generally made of leather on the exterior and then the interior is either satin or brushed leather for an all over classy look and feel. The outside of the bag is often stitched in a pattern as mentioned above and has two to four pockets on it. Overall the bag has sort of a square look to it with 10-12 inch handles on it. Most of the Chanel Reporter handbags also have at least one zipper pocket on the inside so that you can hold valuables or even a wallet in a secured pocket.


Not only do Chanel Reporter Handbags look great and have a great reputation as being very fashionable, each one is unique. Every reporter bag is issued its own hologram authorization number and card. This is the way to ensure that the Chanel reporter bag that you have purchased or that you are looking into purchasing is not a replica. With so many knock offs out there today, this hologram is one of the best ways to ensure that you are buying Chanel and nothing less. If in doubt, you can always look at the stitching and the overall craftsmanship of the handbag to see if you are dealing with the real deal or not. Chanel is very detail oriented and because the reporter bag does have many small details you will likely be able to discredit the fakes before you even consider paying for them.


If you want to buy a real Chanel Reporter Handbag for less than retail price you will not have a hard time doing just that. At the end of each season you'll find that your Chanel dealer will mark some of the bags down to make room for some of the newer bags. You can find that retailers will mark their Chanel bags down up to 30% or more when they need to make room for more products, and you can take advantage and save a couple hundred dollars. You can also shop on the Internet and find that many people are either selling their own personal Reporter handbags or there are discount or wholesale dealers online that will offer you a handbag at a great price. Of course, when you are buying online you should proceed with care to ensure that you are getting a real Chanel Reporter handbag, but generally you'll have an easy time of it.


The Chanel Reporter Handbag really is one of the most beautiful that you can find, whether it is new or old. Not only is it very stylish, it is also very functional. Whether you are a fashion guru, a businesswoman, or a stay at home mom, the Chanel Reporter will work for you and your life quite well.


Chanel revolutionized haute couture fashion by completely replacing the traditional corset with the comfort and casual elegance of simple suits and dresses. She introduced to the world hersignature cardigan jacket in 1925, introducing a more sultry and seductive definition to “sexy.” She had numerous other major successes that changed the fashion industry including the ever popular "'Chanel suit'", an elegant creation composed of a knee-length skirt and trim, boxy jacket, traditionally made of woven wool with black sewing trim and gold buttons, worn with large costume-pearl necklaces. Elite women of high societies around the world began to flock to the now legendary Rue Cambon boutique to commission couture outfits from her. The House of Chanel became an icon of elegance and from then on, the name “Chanel” became synonymous to elegance, wealth, and elitism, as well as the ultimate sign of French high class, la coquetterie.

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