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December 25, 2009
Dream Bag: Studded leather shoulder bag by Alaïa

We’re all about Parisian style today, and fashion doesn’t get much more achingly chic than Azzedine Alaïa. So if you’ve dreamed of getting your hands on an investment piece by the ‘King of Cling’ for some time, now could be your chance as The Outnet have cut prices on a stunning range of Alaïa items.

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They include this large-sized shoulder bag, which is the only accessory I’ve yet seen that makes the studded look appear ‘charming’. The bag is definitely charming and despite first glance appearances is also covered in studs: the studs have been arranged prettily and neatly to mimic an elegant cut-out effect.

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GET THE LOOK: Hayden Panettiere’s Rebecca Minkoff ‘Morning After’ bag

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Proving Rebecca Minkoff’s Morning After bag has not only lasting appeal but still has some major celebrity kudos attached to it too, Hayden Panittiere has been seen out and about shopping in LA with it placed firmly on her shoulder. It’s classic shape, minimal detailing, and quality material and workmanship has seen it skip the ‘It’ bag tag, and end up in the “actually very lovely bag which will always remain lovely” pile. Which is a pretty good pile to end up in, really. It’s still far more reasonably priced than some of its flashier counterparts and is available in black, almond and wine for $595 from Rebecca Minkoff.

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Get the Gossip on the ‘Roady’ bag

Not since Sex and the City has a TV series prompted so much shoe and bag lust as Gossip Girl and the latest arm candy to leap from our screens and into our hearts is the Yves Saint Laurent ‘Roady’ bag, pictured above.

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The classic hobo makes its debut in episode 12 of season 3, to the awe and wonderment of the show’s main characters – and it’s been having a similar effect on audiences in the States ever since. Kylie Minogue, Mary-Kate Olsen and Rihanna are also big fans of the bag, and have all been spotted wearing it in recent weeks. Rendered in black, the bag is timeless chic, for everyday or evening wear.

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December 24, 2009
Judith Leiber Marquis Celebration Overture

Hear ye, hear ye, I am 100% in holiday mode right now. I want the Christmas lights to be on all day long. I want to be surrounded by friends and family. And of course, I want to look the part. Tomorrow night we will be heading to a dinner party with some family friends of ours and I would love to carry a snazzy handbag which could capture my spirit. While I already know what I am wearing and what I am going to carry, I came across this gorgeous Judith Leiber evening bag and I fell in love.

Judith-Marquis-Celebration-Overture

I haven’t been able to justify the purchase of a Judith Leiber handbag or accessory, but this one could very well be the investment piece I’ve been waiting for. The Judith Leiber Marquis Celebration Overture is completely gorgeous. This bag is elegant, exquisite and breathtaking. The bag is beaded with jet marquise and multicolor pave Austrian crystals. Given the color of the crystals, I love that the bag is topped off with silver hardware and a silver shoulder chain. I really appreciate the design of the bag because it can be used by such a wide range of ages. Buy through Bergdorf Goodman for $2795.

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December 23, 2009
Pila Designs

Recently I was introduced to a luxury accessory line that I can not pass up covering for you all. Pila Designs focus is to bring luxury to female tech accessories. We all have iPhones and Blackberries, iPods and iPod touches. The cases that are offered at the phone stores are practical but they are not luxurious. This site is about fashion and luxury, so the marriage of tech accessories with the high end market is a bit hard.

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While some designers offer tech cases, I am always on the look out for something more innovative. You must give Pila Designs that, they are imaginative and creative in their designs. From the first moment entering their website there is a Hermes-esque vibe, with perfectly put together whimsical illustrations that include the cases.

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There is a variety of cases to choose from, including hard shell cases, open front cases, and my personal favorite, the cute vest cases. Along with the different styles there are of course different colors and patterns. The most easily accessible version is the ‘Schappy’ as you can see the front of your iPhone screen. Every option may appeal to a different person and every option mixes function with fashion.

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December 22, 2009
MIT says that you better look rich or your bag will look fake

According to Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher Renee Richardson Gosline (yeah, that’s right, MIT is interested in your handbag), consumers are far more likely to identify a counterfeit bag as real when worn by someone that “looks” rich and a real bag as counterfeit when worn by someone that “looks” poor. I’m not sure why that would come as a huge surprise to anyone, but the fact that its been scientifically confirmed means that we can all congratulate ourselves on being logical, I suppose..

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Before you fire up the keyboard and claim in the comments that you don’t care if people think your bag is fake or that it’s shallow for people to assume things about you because you dress a certain way, please slow your roll and read the stuff after the jump.

Inherent in fashion is the desire to create a cohesive personal style and public image, and if we weren’t expecting for it to matter in some way how we portray ourselves to the world, then we’d just all wear sweatpants and Ugg boots like we all really want to, deep down (or maybe I’m projecting). And it’s okay! Caring about public perception is actually a very grown-up thing to do, no matter how many times you told your mom that you didn’t care what people thought of you as a teenager.

As it turns out, the efforts that we make on behalf of our egos are perceived pretty accurately, which is to say that people with money usually do a good job looking like they have money, and others are more likely to assume that the bags of wealthy-looking people are real. On the other hand, most people think a bag is fake if the other contextual clues in the wearer’s appearance don’t project wealth.

The most relevant conclusion of the study for people that love authentic bags is that buying a counterfeits, by itself, isn’t fooling anyone. Carrying a fake bag (one which many people might perceive as expensive in another context) isn’t enough to override everything else about someone’s appearance – instead of making the person look rich by proximity, it just makes everyone think that the bag they’re carrying is fake. That means that the people out there that bought a fake Louis Vuitton and have no other personal style to speak of wasted their money, and most people are able to accurately surmise that their bag isn’t the real thing. As it turns out, you really can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear, as they say.

Bloomberg really managed to bury the lede on this article, though. All of the previous stuff seems fairly logical, but what I found most interesting was this little statistic, nestled at the end: Of women that buy counterfeit bags, 46% go on to buy the real thing within two years. People that buy fakes may think that they have one over on the rest of us bag-buying fools, but as it turns out, a lot of them are just at the beginning of a fashion progression that will ultimately turn them into the high-dollar consumers that they thought they could fool with a pleather Gucci.

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Stella McCartney Chain Faux Leather Bag

After we posted about the BV Croc Fume bags, the comment flood gates exploded. We truly enjoyed reading every comment. The photos and post got all of you thinking and sharing which means the photo did invoke an emotional response, meaning the photos got their job done. With that in mind, today there will be a post by both Amanda and I with your comments in mind.

I am going to delve into a category that we rarely cover on PurseBlog but will try to cover more, eco-friendly handbags. One of the most well-know eco friendly designers has a famous last name and a line of clothing and handbags that grace red carpets, catwalks, and celebs.

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Yes, it is Stella McCartney I am speaking of. Some of our favorite celebs who carry Stella McCartney bags include Rihanna, Kate Hudson, Carrie Underwood, and Liv Tyler.

The reason why Stella McCartney is a great go-to for faux leather is because her bags are still luxurious, still current, and still able to fit right in. McCartney is known for her chain bags, such as the Stella McCartney Chain Faux Leather Bag. This bag is an overall great look, black faux leather, silver-tone chain embellished trim, glazed finish. Actually, the casual rocker vibe that this handbag gives is great. What I have a hard time wrapping my head around is the price. This is a faux leather bag that costs $1,400. Clearly part of what you will pay for, as with many designers, is the name. McCartney is a big name! Buy through Net A Porter for $1,395.

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Blog Debates: Is it disrespectful to depict a bag with the animal from which it came?

It seems as though we had a bit of a kerfuffle on our hands over the weekend.

On Friday night, Megs posted pictures of two bags as the last in our 12 Days of Bottega Veneta series. The bags were made of crocodile and depicted with Wally the Stunt Alligator, a resident of the Everglades Holiday Park in South Florida. Note: Wally was not harmed in the making of this (or any other) post.

Despite that, reactions to the photos were decidedly mixed. Some people found them beautiful and thought provoking, while other commenters left messages on the blog and Facebook that ranged from “unacceptable” to “perverted.” With reactions that disparate and opinionated, we couldn’t help but have an official Blog Debate.

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One commenter brought up that Wally might think that the bags were his mom and dad, so let’s dispatch with that issue right away – alligators and crocodiles don’t have the cognitive ability to recognize a handbag as being made of an animal that’s similar to themselves. Even if they did, gators aren’t exactly cuddly family creatures; when in the wild, they very often bite, maim and kill each other. That’s why it’s so hard to find good alligator and crocodile skins for bags – even in captivity, it’s difficult to stop them from attacking each other in ways that create serious wounds (and later, serious scars).

Taking those things into consideration, I don’t think we managed to hurt Wally’s feelings. Indeed, it could be argued that anthropomorphizing Wally into a creature that’s capable of human emotions serves him a greater disadvantage than recognizing his innate alligator-ness. Ascribing to him complex emotions of which he is not capable is not advantageous to him in any way and merely makes those that do it feel more satisfied with their own sensitivity. I’m sure that Wally is perfectly satisfied with his own alligator thoughts.

An issue that was brought up more often is that of respect. Is it inherently disrespectful to depict an animal with objects made from similar animals? I don’t think so, but certainly many commenters disagreed with me.

In my estimation, it would be far more disrespectful to completely divorce the idea of animal products from the animals that died to make them. Removing any reminder of the crocodile from the depiction of a crocodile bag only makes the animal’s life less significant, and it only makes it easier for consumers to forget that something died in order to make the products that they wish to consume. Certainly some people do wish to forget entirely that living things died for their bags, but it’s not our job to facilitate it. People that find the thought so ghastly may want to reconsider the role that animal products play in their lives.

So what is our job? Well, Vlad’s job as a photographer (philosophically, at least) is to capture images that elicit some sort of reaction when people view them. Whether those reactions come because the photos are beautiful or because they stir up some other kind of emotion in the viewer is not entirely relevant to his goals – the reaction itself is the goal, and if the photos provoke thoughts and emotions, then it has been accomplished. Art’s success is not necessarily predicated on its positivity.

As for the rest of us, our job is to create a context within which we can all think about bags, fashion and accessories. The fashion industry is a behemoth, and it affects the lives and livelihood of not just animals, but humans at every level of society and in every corner of the globe. Losing that perspective on the things we consume would be irresponsible and short-sighted, but retaining it is not always pleasant and pretty. If Wally’s afternoon in the presence of a few crocodile bags can remind us all of those issues, then I think he has managed to make himself a very important alligator.

But this is, after all, a blog debate. Let us know how you feel about the issue in the comments.

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December 11, 2009
Jimmy Choo Martha Perforated Clutch

Prada, take note: if you insist on producing bags comprised mainly of perforated leather, then you might want to take some notes from Jimmy Choo on how you do it correctly.

We witnessed one of Prada’s perforated failings last week, so now I think that it’s only fair that we feature something like the Jimmy Choo Martha Perforated Clutch, which uses perforation tastefully. Well…maybe “tastefully” isn’t the word. Maybe it would best be described as “stylishly.”

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The key to this clutch’s success over the perforated Prada bag is that this one uses perforations artfully and as a single element, not the full show. The pink diamond-shaped cutouts remind me more of fishnet stalkings than basketball jerseys, and I much prefer to be aesthetically transported to the 80s than to a sporting event.

It also works better because the clutch is designed better as a whole – perforations that might not work otherwise are elevated by their surroundings. I love that the entire bag is a single, beautiful color but that it has elements done in three different textures. Instead of being one-note like the Prada bag, it’s visually interesting and incredibly stylish (if you dig the 80s thing that’s going on in fashion right now, which I happen to). Buy through Net-a-Porter for $1175.

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Dolce & Gabbana Miss Brigette Dome Satchel

Is anyone else seeing an Hermes Bolide when they look at the Dolce & Gabbana Miss Brigette Dome Satchel? I definitely am.

Which is not necessarily a bad thing, since the Bolide is an elegant bag choice in its own right. But like all things Hermes, the Bolide can be prohibitively expensive for a lot of people, and having a slightly less expensive but still well-made option in a similar shape is not necessarily a bad thing.

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Not that Hermes officially has some sort of monopoly on making bags that are this shape, but the resemblance to their products is a lot closer than it is to, say, the Louis Vuitton Alma. Particularly when you add in the clochette and the horizontal exterior pocket, which mirrors the external seaming on the Bolide.

Normally I’m not a fan of bags that remind me so precisely of other bags, but I think I may actually like this version more than the original, the more that I look at it. The choice of the smooth, slouchy leather is spot-on for creating a bag with the everyday sort of elegance for which the Bolide strives, and turning the external seam into a pocket is totally functional. Plus it’s lined in leopard-print, and that’s the kind of secret kick of attitude that I like. Buy through Saks for $1595.

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