Monday, December 17, 2007

 

Free Shipping: eFashionHouse for Designer Handbags


Free 2-Day Delivery for Holiday Shoppers is available at http://www.eFashionHouse.com. Use coupon code FREE2DAY during checkout. A $200 minimum purchase is required for this offer. The coupon value is $18.00. Only one coupon code can be used per order. To use more than one coupon, place separate orders.

eFashionHouse.com was named Best of the Web by People StyleWatch for discount designer handbags. About.com recognized eFashionHouse.com as the top of three online retailers selling below retail priced authentic Chanel handbags and accessories.

Don't wait too long to finish your shopping. eFashionHouse offers free shipping and no sales tax on all its orders. For more details visit the website or contact CustomerCare@eFashionHouse.com. Happy Holidays!

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Monday, November 19, 2007

 

Holiday Shopping Discount Coupons Online - Save this post






Holiday Shopping Discount Coupons Online - Save this post.

Great Savings on designer fashion accessories. All the major brands discounted 30% to 90% off retail.


Click here for the an A-Z Designers Index: Gucci, Fendi, Tods, Ferragamo, Chanel, Marc Jacobs, Dior, Etro, Prada, Cole Haan, Michael Kors, Ralph Lauren, Liz Claiborne, Dooney & Bourke, Coach and many, many more of your favorite fashion designers. All guaranteed authentic or your money back.


eFashionHouse.com was named Best of the Web by People StyleWatch Magazine and named the top of three retailers for authentic Chanel by About.com.


Shop

eFashionHouse.com - FIVE fashion online stores:



  1. BrandsBoutique

  2. ValueBags

  3. LuxuryVintage

  4. DesignersLA

  5. ItalysOutlet

Register to receive Free Gift News at http://www.eFashionHouse.com and be the frist to receive additional discounts by email throughout the Holidays.

Save these Coupons - valid today through December 22, 2007.

  • Use coupon code OFF20 for an extra 20% off your entire FINAL CLEARANCE purchase.
  • Use coupon code OFF10 for an extra 10% off your entire SALE SECTION purchase.
  • FREE Fedex USA Shipping $200 orders expires December 17, 2007 (no coupon needed)
  • NO Sales Tax World Wide (no coupon needed)

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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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