Archive for September, 2007

Marc Jacobs Trendy And Unique Designer Handbags

There are a multitude of designers out there. From Gucci to Guess to Kate Spade to Prada. Have you noticed that many of the handbags look alike in style and color? Marc Jacobs stands alone as an independent designer who has developed and promoted trendy handbags that are like none other.

Marc Jacobs has a unique style of casual vintage grunge with sophistication. He is a young designer who prides himself on being unique and bold with his use of colors and designs. He is adored and respected across the board from rock stars to Hollywood starlettes. He has a diverse crowd of followers who are looking for something different that is not mainstream.

Marc Jacobs was born in New York City and studied at the Parsons School of Design. He originally designed hand knit sweaters. While he was still in college, he has won numerous awards including the Perry Ellis Gold Thimble and other prestigious awards. His first collection was ?sketchbook? and he was a partner with Robert Duffy. After working with him for several years, Marc Jacobs went out on his own.

He designs clothing and handbags for both men and women. He introduced his handbag collection in 2000. One of the most popular is the satchel which has a zipper closure with a belt like strap. The strap doubles as a shoulder strap or it can be carried by hand. Typically, the purses are lined in suede. The purses retail for $1,000 however, if you shop on line you make be able to find an authentic Marc Jacobs handbag for around $500-$600.00.
The Hobo handbag is made of soft leather with two front flaps. It has a front pocket with a buckle and a double shoulder strap. Other popular handbags include the lambskin quilted Stam bag, Ursula Bowler, Luxury Leather Marisa and Ventia Bronze.

The Spring line of Marc Jacobs handbags include a white calf leather and is named Karolina White. The Elise is quilted with a vintage look. The leather straps are rolled and it has a roomy interior. Also a pocket for a cell phone and many small functional compartments which makes this handbag very practical.

Womens Daily magazine named him the ?Guru of Grunge?. The line includes bright colors, many layers, stripes and large prints. Marc Jacobs is known for going against the grain and he is not afraid to take chances and risks. In 2002, Marc Jacobs designed a yoga bag to benefit Cancer research. He is also working on an accessory line to compliment his handbags. His style has been desribed as edgey and he is described as an enlightened designer who is forward thinking. If you are looking for a unique handbag pay attention to the Marc Jacobs line and see what is next on the horizon. You will most likely be pleasantly surprised.

________________

Handbags Handmade Designer Bali Indonesia

http://www.bcbali.com-wholesale handbags rattan leather indonesiaRattan Leather bags,wholesale handbags-www.bcbali.com

New Fashion Handbag Straw

Fashion Straw Handmade Baliwww.bcbali.com- wholesale fashion straw bags balinew fashion handbag straw from www.bcbali.comhttp://www.bcbali.com-bags purses handmade straw leather

Fab Bag of the Day – Hobo Clutch

We haven’t featured a lot of styles from today’s featured designer handbag brand but we sure are fans. Known for being affordable and offering a variety of styles, HOBO handbags are the fashionista-on-a-budget dream brand because you can carry the latest styles without dropping the rent check. HOBO INTERNATIONAL ruby clutch measures approximately 9 inch long by 4.5 inch tall by 1 inch deep. Chain strap is about 13 inches long with a 4 inch drop. Metal chain strap is removable. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag.

Click here to get this HOBO bag for only $70!

____________________

Fab Bag of the Day – Marc Jacobs Blondie Tote

Heading into the weekend, we wanted to feature a designer handbag that is the perfect weekend tote, and this ‘Blondie’ tote from MARC JACOBS is just that. Paying homage to one of our favorite music icons, the blue MARC JACOBS tote has a picture of Debbie Harry on the front with the message “Marc Jacobs and Debbie Harry Proudly Support the Provincetown Art Association and Museum” on the back of the tote. Tote measures about 10 x 12 x 4 inches. Double straps are about 20 inches each with about a 10 inch drop. Guaranteed authentic.

Click here to purchase this MARC JACOBS tote for only $25!

_____________________

Many find teenagers’ expensive tastes both scary and shocking

By Monica Corcoran , Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Jillian Hurwitz doesn’t really need to shop for a back-to-school wardrobe. After all, the stylish 15-year-old attends a private school where she wears a uniform every day. But that didn’t stop her from hitting the racks at the Madison boutique in Brentwood on a recent afternoon.

Forget cruising the mall for $39.99 Gap fall sweaters. At the moment, Jillian is dallying with an armful of designer jackets and jumpers by Marc Jacobs.

Chanel is definitely my favorite designer,” she says, emerging from the dressing room. She adds that her most prized designer purse is a black Yves Saint Laurent Muse bag, which sells for about $1,200. Her best friend, 14-year-old Jennifer Hourani, prefers her Chloe Paddington handbag. But today, Jennifer is carrying a pristine, white leather Dolce & Gabbana tote (it was shelved after Labor Day).

If this all leaves you aghast, you haven’t spent enough time at the mall lately. Teens have become a force in the luxury market. The days of begging parents for a Benetton rugby or Coach saddle bag are long gone. They don’t just covet luxury goods, they buy them. A lot of them, in fact.

Designer labels make up about 15.3 percent of purchases by 13- to 17-year-olds, according to a recent study by New York-based marketing research company NPD Group. Five years ago, that figure hovered at 9.6 percent. Increasingly, luxury brands are catering to younger customers.

There may be no generation as thoroughly saturated in brand advertising as the one growing up right now. Beyond the glossy ads in magazines and on television, Marc Jacobs runs Internet campaigns, celebrities are paid to brandish luxury goods (and what they wear is dutifully chronicled in gossip columns and Web sites) and luxury campaigns feature preteen spokesgirls. Not to mention label names are actual plot points in TV shows, music and movies.

No wonder teens talk waaaaay more about labels than their parents. A recent survey of more than 2,000 13- to 17-year-olds by marketing consultants Keller Fay Group found that kids have 145 conversations about brands per week. Adults invoke brand names about half as often.


Jillian and Jennifer are more fluent than most. They shop every weekend and quickly spot the new inventory at Ron Herman. Last summer, the girls bought purses in France and Spain — one that they will even share. And Jillian has her heart set on a quilted red Chanel designer handbag for her 16th birthday in February.

Jillian and Jennifer attend the Archer School for Girls, where the dress code forbids creative ensembles and excessive jewelry. When it comes to book bags and handbags, however, the sky is apparently the limit.

“Girls at school have Birkin bags,” says Jillian, referring to the iconic carryall by Hermes that commands upward of $10,000 and a two-year wait list. “I don’t know if I have seen anyone with a crocodile one, though.”

“The luxury brands are endearing themselves to younger audiences and making an emotional connection,” says J. Elias Portnoy, chief strategist at brand marketing agency the Portnoy Group. “If you develop a relationship early, you’re likely to have a customer for life.”

Jillian was willing to give up all her other gifts to get the YSL Muse bag last Christmas, says her mom, Laurie Feltheimer, who oversees a fashion Web site called “Hot in Hollywood” on hsn.com. Dad Jon Feltheimer runs Lionsgate. “Girls today know about the ‘It’ bag before it even comes out,” Laurie Feltheimer says. “It makes me a little sad.”

Skye Peters is another 15-year-old Archer School student who shops at Neiman Marcus and Barneys for her school tights. Her dream designers are Chanel and Yves Saint Laurent — she even pronounces Laurent flawlessly with a silent T — and she also shoulders a YSL Muse purse as her book bag.


Skye, whose parents are Hollywood producers Jon Peters and Christine Forsyth-Peters, says she sees classmates carrying moderately priced Le Sportsac carryalls, too. “Mainly, it’s the younger girls who have Birkins,” she says. “I guess it’s a little weird, since they are so expensive.”

Then again, the news in Us Weekly and other tabloids that Lindsay Lohan’s orange Birkin bag was stolen from Heathrow Airport last year enlightened her fans to the brand. An article on About.com on teen fashion lists the Hermes Birkin as a “must-have item of the moment that every handbag enthusiast should own, or at least know about.”

Blame Hollywood, too. Two years ago, on the now canceled “Gilmore Girls,” Rory received a Birkin from her boyfriend. She promptly responded by saying, “I love you,” and he replied, “The lady who sold this purse to me said that was going to happen.”

Now, that’s a romantic spin on young love.

French luxury retailer Hermes doesn’t market to teens, but other designers have no qualms about courting the Clearasil set. In this month’s Teen Vogue, glossy ads for oversize fall handbags by Gucci, Chloe, and Louis Vuitton can be found in the first 10 pages of the mini-magazine with a cult following among teenagers.

And that’s just the ads. The women’s media Web site Jezebel.com recently tallied the prices of the merchandise featured in the editorial content of the September issue of Teen Vogue to a total of $74,458. Per their research, Cosmopolitan — not CosmoGirl, mind you — rang in at just $27,636.64.

The fact that dewy Scarlett Johansson pouts as the face of Vuitton and Lohan now fronts for Jill Stuart is no accident either. Just ask Calvin Klein. When the designer put Brooke Shields, then 15 and an idol to teen girls, in his jeans for ads in 1980, CBS banned the commercial, but denim sales soared.


Marc Jacobs — who featured 12-year-old Dakota Fanning in his clothing ads in February — takes youth marketing to a new level with his new fragrance, Daisy. The scent’s MySpace-inspired online campaign revolves around a Web community that you must be invited to join. Who but a sullen teen sent to her room has time to play games to win Marc Jacobs screen savers?

Even Karl Lagerfeld’s recent announcement that he will design a line of eponymous handbags and luggage that won’t exceed $1,000 sounds like a way to target his adoring adolescent Chanelphiles.


“I get it,” says Jillian, over a cup of pea soup at California Pizza Kitchen. “These designers know that we like their brands and want to suck up to us.”


On this afternoon, Jillian wears Chanel flats and a pair of Chanel logo earrings. She adds that salespeople at the Beverly Hills store don’t shun her because of her age. “They’re nice to us.”


“These luxury stores don’t shoo out teens anymore,” says Portnoy, the marketing strategist. “They’ve been instructed to keep an eye out for them and take care of them.”

_________________________________________

Fab Bag of the Day – Marc Jacobs Satchel


We’re all about comfort here, which is why today’s featured designer handbag from MARC JACOBS is definitely our favorite the week. A comfy leather, green satchel that’s sure to make your ensemble pop, this designer handbag is a must-have fall staple. MARC JACOBS designer purses measures approximately 16 W x 7 H with an 8 inch depth. Double strap leather handles measure about 20 inches with a 9.5 inch drop. Zip top closure. Guaranteed authentic. Comes with sleeper bag.