Eddie Van Halen dies of Throat Cancer aged 65
- By zinacef
- Celebrity News, Gossip, and Style
- 10 Replies
Great guitar player there is. DH is a big fan of his guitar playing!
Hi dear,@vixen18 I'm so glad I found this thread since I am interested in the same gunmetal bag you purchased! I am wondering how the wear and tear has been. I am usually wary of metallic finishes since the color can wear off, but on the other hand I have a gold metallic coach bag that is many years old and the finish was very durable while I was still using it.
Mine falls to the hand but not this far down, maybe a 1/2 or so highter closer to wrist but still bangle like and I love it. Great alone or for stacking.
Yes, this is a common occurrence discussed at length throughout the last 50 pages or so of this thread.Has anyone experienced SA just left your text on read with no reply?
This is the one I was referring too .. it's not 100% lizard specific to kellys and birkins, it's mostly ostrichIn that case
Ostrich and Lizard... PICS ONLY!!!
Please post photos of your bags in Ostrich and Lizard. Please indicate the color name, style bag, and leather of the bag you are posting. Please remember this is a picture only thread... NO CHATTER!!! Thank you!forum.purseblog.com
I’m no expert, but if You’ve authenticated; the seller takes returns; and you can take it to a prefessional to ask, then follow your gut instinct (depends on how much you love the bag, how great your desire is for a project; and how great a deal) YMMV! Good luck and keep us posted!Hi! Sorry to piggy back on your thread OP, but I also have a question about buying an imperfect bag... I’m looking to buy my first Chanel - a medium black caviar CF with GHW. I’ve found a pre-loved option which is a real steal, BUT the bag has a slight scuff on one part of it. The caviar leather is scuffed away on one of the bottom corners. It’s a tiny patch, about half the size of the eraser on the end of a pencil. Not having owned a caviar bag before, I’m not sure whether this scuff would develop with more (careful!) use. Would the leather ‘peel’ away now that it’s compromised? Would really appreciate people’s views!
(Photo posted below)
I've declined many bags over the years. And the offers keep coming. It will not affect your relationship.
I have to shake my head when I read people saying they bought a bag they didn't like and now don't know what to do.
Thanks dear...I have the Epi Black Cannes and the BCS in Monogram and one special edition (its white with a diagonal stripe) Boite Chapeau Souple. I've been using the Cannes a lot lately - it holds more than you'd think, but the BCS definitely has more room. I do not have the Lockme - don't really like Flap bags much, but it is a lovely bag.
My family is planning to tent our house to get rid off the termite. Anyone has the same experience? Is it okay to leave designer bags in such condition with unknown chemical or I should just take them with me? Please let me know
When he popped up on a Zoom call Thursday, Trove LLC CEO Andy Ruben was wearing a black secondhand Vince t-shirt that he’d bought online.
“I’d never owned anything from Vince. I probably would have bought Gap T,” Ruben said. “But the Vince shirt is way better. Now I know.”
Ruben used to run e-commerce at Walmart; now, he helps brands like Eileen Fisher and REI buy back their products and sell them again. He buys his kids worn gear from Patagonia – another client – sells it when they outgrow it and spends the proceeds on other new, used garments.
This week, Ruben had a new Trove customer to crow about, Levi Strauss & Co., which just launched a resale program called SecondHand with the tagline “Even better the second time around.” The company has already taken great strides to use less water in its production, now it’s paying up to $35 for its old clothes. Even a ratty, unsellable pair of jeans will fetch a $5 gift card.
The shift to thrift follows similar announcements from Arc’Teryx, Taylor Stitch and, a few days ago, Ikea. So-called circular shopping is a masterstroke of sustainability, but it’s proving to be a sneaky-good sales strategy too. As with Ruben and Vince t-shirts, about two-thirds of people who buy from Trove are new to the purchased brand and within six months more than one in 10 of those people buy a new item from it. Not only do the secondhand platforms seldom cannibalize the full-priced channel, but they cede it with new customers – extremely loyal ones at that. It’s a tidy stream of incremental revenue that Apple and the auto industry figured out how to tap long ago. “Levi’s made these items,” Ruben said, “why should Levi’s only get the first sale?” What’s more, why should Levi’s leave its brand in the hands of eBay trolls, consignment shops soaked in Nag Champa and the rash of secondhand Web stores like TheRealReal.
One very good reason: apparel is a logistical nightmare. Each item has to be cleaned, reconditioned, analyzed, priced, photographed and listed in a process nearly as involved as making the garment in the first place. And each piece is unique – a slightly faded fleece, a scuffed pair of jeans; the model presents a near infinite set of SKUs.
That’s where Trove’s army of 200 apparel elves comes in. In recent months they have been a blur, as COVID catalyzed a frenzy of transactions from newly frugal consumers and folks who suddenly weren’t keen on shopping in stores. At the same time, they are funneling back to apparel makers a stream of sensitive data about who is buying, who is selling and where their products are breaking down.
“Honestly, everyone in retail should be doing this,” Ruben explained. “It’s the way customers are shopping.”
Ruben, meanwhile, has more big ideas. Eventually, he says brick and mortar stores make sense. Levi’s are already well-stocked in thrift shops; why shouldn’t Levi’s own the thrift shop? And there are a host of other sectors where secondhand scans well, kitchen gear, for example, luxury handbags, high-end watches and tools.
“Two years ago, I had to explain what this was,” Ruben said, “that’s just not the case anymore.”