Saturday, September 14, 2013

Nicole Richie: "Please Stop Saying 'Chic!'"

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single girl in possession of a credit card must be in want of Nicole Richie's style. The California native might be the closest thing America has to Alexa Chung—at least if you go by the seemingly millions of Richie-inspired outfits posted daily on Facebook and Instagram. Richie helps them along with Winter Kate, her clothing line, and House of Harlow 1960, her jewelry collection—which just happens to have a new campaign launching right now. We spoke to the designer (who has paired up with Macy's and QVC) about her favorite bands, wearing easy braids, and why pets want to be famous.


Your line has usually taken visual cues from the '60s. Why were you feeling a '70s vibe for fall?
Because my line is called House of Harlow 1960, people assume it's literal. What I mean when I talk about "The '60s" is a vibe that definitely extended into the '70s as well. It's about freedom and labels not really being part of your wardrobe. It's about layering lots and lots of jewelry, and having everything transition from day to night. It's really about that free-spirited energy and excitement that you can see in those periods, not a definite or defined year.
Was there a certain music or pop culture trigger for this particular collection?
Well, I'm lucky because I have a lot of vinyl and a lot of great music which always inspires me. But besides all the classic stuff, I've been listening to a lot of Avenged Sevenfold.
Do they have a classic rock sound?
Avenged Sevenfold is actually a metal band, believe it or not. I mean sometimes, yes, I love metal! Not just in jewelry! Joel [Madden, Richie's husband] introduced me to them, and I play them all the time. But they don't look like Metallica. They're not a hair band. Oh, you know who else is really good? Passenger. They're like folk rock. They're so good.
Do you remember the first piece of jewelry you ever designed?
I do, actually. I grew up in Los Angeles, and I used to buy these pieces of velvet and these charms, like little silver elephant charms and little charms with an Indian vibe. I would make chokers out of them with superglue. It cost about $10 to make one necklace, and I would charge $10 for them, so my parents had to intervene and say, "You know, Nicole, you really need to work on your business plan before you keep doing this."

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I was 10. [Laughs] So I guess I had some time to figure all that out!
Your dog Iro co-stars in the upcoming House of Harlow 1960 campaign. How long have you had him?
About a year. At first, it was Joel's thing. He did all the research. He was very specific about the kind of German Shepherd he wanted, and he was really involved and really excited about getting a dog, but now I'm his primary caretaker! He's my dog for sure!
How did you know he'd sit still during a photo shoot?
Oh, because he's a fame whore and he lives for the camera. [Laughs] What can I say, some men need attention, and need to be adored! And Iro is one of them!
You know what's great about House of Harlow? Your rings come in really small sizes.
Thank you! I had to make them that way, because my fingers are so small. So we always make a wide range of sizes, and I'm always surprised that it's not a standard thing. I know I'm not the only one with small fingers.
What's the most complicated hairstyle you can do on yourself?
I am the best braider in the world. I can braid anyone's hair, I can braid my own hair, and I can do all kinds of complicated and intricate braids. I'm a master of the braid.
What about makeup? You always have amazing black eyeliner that never seems to smudge?
That I can't tell you about. I'm not that kind of "lady" who always leaves the house with makeup. In fact, the only time I wear makeup is when I'm working. So I have no idea how my eyeliner stays on. All I know is that I have really talented makeup artists.
Is there an overused word you'd like to retire?
Chic! Please stop saying chic!

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Monday, September 9, 2013

Even Though Christian Siriano Is "Not Cool," He's Taking Over the World

Christian Siriano has only taken one real vacation in his life (no, really—just keep reading), but he still manages to create whimsical ready-to-wear collections and his popular Payless shoe line. And in addition to all of that, just last week, he broke the news that he is adding eyewear, hair care, fragrance, and home decor collections. So basically the Project Runway winner is a Karl Lagerfeld in training. We chatted with the reality TV-star turned runway champ before his show to see how he's fitting it all in and to find out why a proper beauty line may be next on his plate.‬

‪Have you been sleeping?‬

‪Last night was a tough night, but other than that it’s pretty good. I feel like you guys have it very hard.‬
‪Let's talk about your spring collection!‬

‪I took my took my first vacation ever and you know I just loved the island...

‪Wait, your first vacation—ever?‬

‪Ever. I’ve never been to a city when I’ve not done something for work, ever. Even when I was younger, we would go travel places but usually it was something for my mother's work. So [recently] I took 10 friends to Islas Mujeres, which means "island of women." My idea [for the spring collection] was a celebration of women. I loved being there. You just feel good about yourself [there]—with the color-block streets and the homes painted in vibrant colors. I just loved the women who worked in the markets and made their own fabrics and textiles. That inspired the [majority] of it.‬
‪How do we see this influence in the designs?‬

‪I tried to bring cool ways of using raffia and handmade French knot techniques in all the pieces. You would see these girls on the beach all day, and then they tousled their hair up and went out all night. That kind of inspired this whole world.
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‪What about Payless shoes this season?‬

‪I love creating pieces that are sculptural and cool, and they’re pretty sexy this season. We played a lot with texture, so there are all different fabrications mixed together. We wanted to make them look crafty but in a refined way.‬
‪So why expand into lifestyle brand empire now?‬

‪Honestly, it was just because in the moment it was happening I had a lot of customers asking for different things. That’s what I try to do every season. My collection obviously is not for every girl—it’s not cool. It’s not the oversize slouchy, edgy, downtown girl. It’s about women who want to shop and buy clothes. So, if they want eyewear, let’s give it to them. If they want maybe a fragrance, I want to give it to them. Why not?‬
‪Is a makeup line next?‬

‪I think so, but it's definitely is one of those things that I really need to build. I’m still a young brand. Beauty in that world is a little scary. I’ve done a collaboration with Victoria’s Secret, and hopefully my own line is down the road.‬
‪Well, we’d love to see some of your runway color palettes on nail polishes and lipsticks.‬

‪Definitely. I was a makeup artist for a long time, so it’s something [I've been thinking about.] That’s how I started. I moved to New York City, LV Bags Cheap Wholesale and I was a makeup artist. So [a makeup line is] down the road, don’t worry.‬
‪Who are some of your favorite It girls right now?‬

‪God, so many. You know I think it’s mostly like girls I love like friends. Atlanta de Cadenet—I went with her to the Style Awards, and we just love each other and get along. She’s coming to the show today. Lizzie Olsen and I are good friends, and she’s amazing. Shailene Woodley came to the show last season, and we've been friends since I dressed her for her first red carpet to the America Music Awards. Now look at her. She’s an amazing actress. It’s pretty cool.‬
‪Some people are saying NYFW has gotten too mass. Agree or disagree?‬

‪You know what, I think it does and it doesn’t. What I try to bring here is how you mix the two together. I mean, I show Payless shoes on the runway, but they’re really about being cool and sculptural and have a real vision to them, so I definitely think there’s that world to it. I try to show that the technique and the workmanship that goes into the clothes is still important to me.‬

Friday, September 6, 2013

Can You Believe This Entire Look Is For Sale At The Supermarket?


What was the last item of clothing you bought in a supermarket? It was probably something small fry like a pair of socks or knickers — but Tesco's latest AW'13 F&F collection might make you rethink that shopping strategy.

The brand's global brand and marketing director, Anita Bolger, revealed to Vogue the label's changing direction, starting with its super-high-end fashion influences: "The Saint Laurent Paris show was a real inspiration — we knew we had some great product, but we took the opportunity to throw out the rule book in terms of styling to inspire our customer." Said inspiration is provided in the physical form of Tom Ford model Jon K donning the menswear line. The collection will hit stores later on this month and prices range from £25 for a blazer and £14 for a blouse. Definitely worth taking a trip down the aisle.

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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Women may buy designer bags to protect their relationships, study suggests


Could women's penchants for designer handbags and shoes actually be a signal for other women to stay away from their significant other?


A new study currently in press for the February 2014 issue of the Journal of Consumer Research suggests that women may use designer goods to tell other females that their significant other is dedicated to them.


"It might seem irrational that each year Americans spend over $250 billion on women's luxury products with an average woman acquiring three new handbags a year, but conspicuous consumption is actually smart for women who want to protect their relationship," study co-author Vladas Griskevicius, an associate professor at the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota, said in a press release. "When a woman is flaunting designer products, it says to other women 'back off my man.'"


To reach that conclusion, researchers conducted five experiments with 649 women of varying ages.


First, the women were given a scenario of seeing a woman at a party with her date. Then they were asked what they thought about that woman's relationship solely based on the quality of her belongings.


The researchers discovered that women were more likely to think that owners of luxury items were in a devoted relationship, and they were less willing to flirt with the owner's significant other. It didn't even matter to them who had paid for the items: The subjects believed that no matter what, the man had something to do with the luxury purchases.


In another experiment, researchers asked the subjects in relationships to picture that another woman was flirting with their man, in order to make them jealous. Then, in a seemingly unrelated task, the women were asked to draw a designer logo. Women who were jealous drew logos twice as large compared to women who were just asked to draw without being provoked.


"The feeling that a relationship is being threatened by another woman automatically triggers women to want to flash Gucci, Chanel, and Fendi to other women," research co-author Yajin Wang, a PhD student at the Carlson School of Management, said in a press release. "A designer handbag or a pair of expensive shoes seems to work like a shield, where wielding a Fendi handbag successfully fends off romantic rivals."


The researchers saw the same behavior when they tried that experiment on single women. To them, this suggested that unattached women may seek out designer brands in order to prevent other women from taking advantage of them when they are in a relationship. In a way, the luxury goods were a signal to stop women from latching onto their future, prospective significant other. The authors added that future research was needed to test this hypothesis.


In one other experiment, they gave participants $5 and told them that they could spend as much as they wanted to buy $1 raffle tickets to win a $200 shopping spree at eight different luxury brand stores including Nordstrom's, Tiffany and Coach.


Then, they tried to make some of the women jealous just like they had done in the previous experiments. Women who felt their relationships were threatened were willing to spend 32 percent more in order for a chance to win the shopping spree. They were also shown to want more expensive handbags, cars, cell phones and shoes.


Previous research by Griskevicius showed that men bought more expensive products in order to show of their wealth and attract mates. Using this study, he believes women buy expensive products to show off to other women, not in order to appeal to men. The author added to the Minneapolis Post that this behavior happens on subconscious level.


"The fact that most women's luxury products are aimed to impress other women helps explain why men have a hard time figuring out if a woman's handbag costs $50 or $5,000," Griskevicius explained. "Women's designer products are geared to show off to other women not men."


He added that women who don't have the desire to flaunt expensive goods may not have as many fears about losing their significant other.


"For women in relationships who are not displaying these fancy handbags and showing off, it suggests that they are more secure in their relationship, that they feel less threatened," Griskeviciu said to the Minneapolis Post.

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Friday, August 16, 2013

America's Most Beautiful People



We searched from coast to coast to find the loveliest celebrity native of each state in the union (plus the District of Columbia!). Click through to find out which Hawaii native has dual citizenship, and which denizen of the Dakotas is a die-hard Steeler’s fan.

Channing Tatum
Cullman, Alabama

The studly model-turned-actor spent a rural childhood in Alabama and Mississippi before going on to star in films like Step Up and G.I. Joe: Rise of the Cobra.

Right now, Channing Tatum, the hunky star of this month's action epic G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, is starring in his own personal version of The Biggest Loser. For a week, he's been adhering to a strict low-carb meal plan and working out three times a day with an ex–Navy Seal. Today, he's even brought his own lunch, if you can call it that, to a West Hollywood café: one American cheese slice, one small apple, one even smaller bunch of grapes, and, for dessert, four peanuts in a tiny condiment container. To play Duke, the Special Ops hero who battles his nemesis, Cobra, in Joe, the 29-year-old Tatum had to keep his six-pack at attention for an ­entire half-year shoot.
It's hard to tell from his V-neck T-shirt and extra-baggy distressed jeans, but Tatum insists he's packed on 20 pounds. "I love my life entirely too much to worry about it," he says, green eyes twinkling. But when paparazzi caught him running shirtless the other day, it did not go unnoticed. "They said, `He let himself go!' " he explains, incredulous. "I'm like Cheap Jordans on Sale, `I'm a guy! It should never matter that much!' " He tosses back the peanuts like a shot of tequila.
Such is the price he must pay for giving us the opportunity to appreciate his buffed body in pretty much every film he's made, from the teenage Twelfth Night romance, She's the Man with Amanda Bynes, to Kimberly Peirce's Stop-Loss, to last spring's Fighting, in which his rogue street fighter, Shawn MacArthur, suits up for every pummeling in an extra-tight white tank. Google "Channing Tatum" and you'll find plenty of shots from his pre-film modeling career. In campaigns for Dolce & Gabbana, Nautica, and Abercrombie, he perfected his signature look—a shaved head, pillowy pursed lips, and tight, tanned abs showcased in positions that range from silly to impossibly sexy. In one memorable shot, snapped by Bruce Weber, the laces of Tatum's leather pants are suggestively undone, and he's lovingly cradling a rooster to his bulging pecs. "My friends give me shit about that one," he says with a laugh. "They're like, `Really? A cock?' But I don't regret anything. There's a naked picture of me out there somewhere," he says with a shrug. "I just want to get it out there that it was really cold in the room."
G.I. Joe was for Tatum, who grew up staging elaborate battles with the action figures, a "wily" kid's dream. Even though he and Marlon Wayons were nearly asphyxiated by their constricting black suits and airless helmets, "We just laughed our way through it," Tatum says. This was achieved in part by pranking costars Sienna Miller and Rachel Nichols—"a lot of burping, farting," Nichols says. "He filled someone's car with porn." The first time the cast got together for a table read, "Marlon showed me his butt, and, I think, Sienna slapped it," Tatum says. His goofiness seems inversely proportional to his good looks and his success. "He is one of the nicest guys—a guys' guy and a girls' guy," says Joe director Stephen ­Sommers. Equally surprising is Tatum's acute awareness of his place in the Hollywood world order. He is the first to admit that his body, and what he can do with it, was the basis for his career and to a certain extent, still is.
The muscles are a product of his compulsive nature. "Anything I love, I become utterly obsessed with," he says. The Tatum family is based on a farm in Alabama, but his parents, Kay and Glenn (she worked for an airline, he in construction), moved Tatum and older sister Paige to Tampa, Florida, where Tatum discovered Gor Chor kung fu, an especially brutal martial art. In high school, when he got sick of being the tall, white football player on the sidelines, he taught himself to break-dance. Within days, he was doing head spins. He did his first back flip off a chain-link fence on a dare.
He got a football scholarship to Glenville State College in West Virginia but dropped out and found himself ­doing everything from framing houses to working as a mortgage broker. He moved to Miami and was discovered on the street by a model scout, leading him to videos and commercials. By 2001, he was living in New York, taking acting lessons, and three years later he moved to Hollywood. With little more than a few episodes of CSI: Miami on his résumé, he landed the lead in Disney's Step Up, the 2006 dance-based teen romance that earned $114 million. Tatum plays Tyler Gage, a Baltimore punk sentenced to community service at a performing arts school. Soon he's popping and locking alongside an aspiring ballerina played by Jenna Dewan; they've been together ever since. Last fall, he proposed in Maui. Rumor is they'll get hitched this summer.
Around the same time that Tatum landed Step Up, he read the script for A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints, Dito Monteil's gritty semi-autobiopic about growing up in Queens in the 1980s, co-starring Robert Downey Jr. Tatum found himself crying uncontrollably. He told his agent he needed to play Antonio, the hotheaded punk who bleeds loneliness. "I couldn't have fought harder to keep him out of my movie," says Monteil, who also wrote and directed Fighting. "I said, `This guy's a male model from freakin' Abercrombie.'" But Tatum pursued the part relentlessly. "I'm so glad I lost that argument," Monteil adds.
"You can tell how strong an actor he is by how he'll underplay something," says Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who plays opposite ­Tatum in Joe, worked with him on ­Havoc and on Stop-Loss, and will be one of his ­dozen-plus groomsmen. ("If I have a bromance with you," Tatum says, "that's it.")
When Saints debuted at Sundance in 2006, Tatum's portrayal of Antonio lit up the phones. With his hair dyed black and his boyish shoulders hunched under a sleeveless jean jacket, his freewheeling rage is so menacing that it's hard to watch. Nike Shoes Wholesale The honesty came from experience. "Antonio was my friend growing up," Tatum says. "I was more the Dito. I was the one who walked away from people."
The performance got him nominated for an Independent Spirit Award, and soon, "every time they needed a white guy to say `yo' or `dawg,' they called me," he says with a laugh. He had no interest in coasting on that thug-with-a-heart persona. "I wasn't the best actor, and I'm probably still not. But I work harder than anyone I know."
He spends every free second he has studying performances and scripts and figuring out how he can "get in the room" with directors he admires. His favorite performance to date is his least physical. In Dear John, out this winter and directed by Lasse Hallström and written by The Notebook's Nicholas Sparks, Tatum plays a soldier home on leave who falls for a college student played by Amanda Seyfried.
"I'm just starting to wrap my head around how to become a real character," he says. "I used to think you always had to be doing something, literally moving, to stay interesting. I'm working on stillness."

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Lollapalooza 2013: An Intimate Chat with MS MR

Yesterday afternoon we got in bed with MS MR. Literally. Before the indie-pop duo's set at Chicago's chichi residency, EnV, for a rooftop soirée hosted by Gilt City, Lizzy Plapinger and Max Hershenow invited us to do their interview in the fluffy bed they had slept in the night before. We obliged.



It was a day before the NYC-based group would be performing at the Lollapalooza festival, and the intimate crowd of pool partiers were ready to watch Plapinger's mesmerizing, rainbow hair-thrashing performance. Hershenow accompanied her on piano and backup vocals. The Vassar College alums released their first EP in September 2012 and have since been touring Europe and the U.S to promote their songs (such as "Hurricane"). Their performance had the elegance of Florence + the Machine with an Ellie Goulding edge. (Plapinger, too, has a signature raspy voice).

Read on to learn how this pair initially got together, why they, too, sweat Beyoncé, and which hair hue Plapinger hopes to try next.

You guys met in college. How has your relationship changed and evolved?

Max: I mean, how hasn't it?
 Lizzy: We went to school together, and we knew each other. We had taken classes together but we weren't very close, we didn't have the same friends. So it wasn't really until after school. We pretty much went from complete strangers to spending every second of the day together. It literally could not have changed any more.

How did you get to this point?

Max: I was producing on the side while going to dance school after graduating from college. We both moved to New York. Lizzie was running her label, Neon Gold. I was interested in producing and sent her and email looking for any artists and she responded with a song she was working on attached. We got together and, magically, it happened really fast. We didn't need to talk about what we were doing, and we didn't talk about it until we started writing the music.

What does performing Cheap Jordans On Sale at Lollapalooza mean to you guys?

Lizzy: We've been in Europe most of the summer doing a headline tour and some festivals over there, so performing at the festivals in the States is a huge milestone for us. We did Governors Ball, are doing Lollapalooza, and then we will be at Outside Lands next weekend. We really picked things that mean a lot to us and make a statement about our ambitions and aspirations. Lollapalooza feels like that. I hope it is a big come out weekend for us.

You are also playing at this intimate party today. How does the size of the venue change your performance?

Max: We try not to change. So much of performing is feeding off of the audience and just feeling it out. Our favorite shows have been both the enormous ones, where we have 10,000 people, and the really tiny basement rooms that are dirty and sweaty.
 Lizzy: You can never really bank on what the audience is going to be like, so the most you can do is have fun with it and make the most of it for yourself. Any situation where we have done that and had a good time, it became infectious and the audience fed off of it.

You guys have great style. What inspires your look?

Lizzy: It's sort of fleeting. It's a little bit grudge, a little but '90s oriented. I hope there is a New York City effortlessness. We are very into our collage aesthetic in all formats and that translates into our fashion sense.
 Max: I take a lot of inspiration from Lizzie's hair. Six months ago I hated orange and would never wear it. Then Lizzie died her hair, and I was like, "Uh, that's orange." I warmed up to it, and now half my wardrobe is orange.

Where do you shop?

Lizzy: In general we wear a lot of vintage and a lot of street brands. We firmly believe that you don't have to spend a lot of money to express your style, look good, and feel comfortable.
 Max: We love ASOS, H&M, and Topshop.
 Lizzy: Vintage for us has become this fun, new activity. Every time we go to a new city we look at which vintage stores we should go to. We are collecting a list.
 Max: It's cool to wear clothes and be like, "Oh my boots are from that one place we went to in Paris, and my jacket is from Portland." You feel like you have a catalogue of every place you've been that you get to wear.

Are there any hair colors you won't try?

Lizzy: I was positive I would never go green. I thought it was revolting and hated when other girls did it. I thought it looked so trashy, but lately I have this burring desire to go neon lime, highlighter green. Now, I feel the same way Max did with orange: No color is totally off the table China Wholesale En Bag.

You toured with Marina and the Diamonds. What was that like?

Max: She took us out on our very first tour ever, so we will always be eternally grateful to her. She is a really dear friend and one of our very first supporters. When she put her stamp of approval on the project, it really gave us the kickstart. Her fans have continued to be some of our strongest supporters.

Who would be your dream collaborator?

Lizzy and Max: Beyoncé.
 Lizzy: Basically there is isn't a day that goes by that we don't talk about Beyoncé.
 Max: We are pretty obsessed with her.
 Lizzy: We have very alternative, DIY taste, and Beyoncé is always the Brooklyn girl in our minds.

What is it about her? Kim Schifino of Matt & Kim is also a mega fan.

Lizzy: Where do you start? I am fascinated by how she has risen to where she is, her ambition, her drive, and how she expanded herself as an artist and as a brand. At the heart of it, she is truly talented but she is also an incredibly smart business woman.
 Max: She is the biggest pop star in the world. She could just be making really solid, safe, Top 40 music, but she is really doing weird stuff that other people aren't doing. That's awesome. And then she performs on stage and looks amazing.

Your songs have been on 'Pretty Little Liars,' 'Grey's Anatomy,' and 'Game of Thrones.' Do you watch those shows?

Max: Some of them. We are always interested to see how our music is used. We are selective about how it is placed but we are pretty open and say yes to most things, especially the TV shows. "Bones" has been used in three different shows. We are really interested to see how it works in totally different situations and how different people interpret it.

Let's talk about your sound. How would you guys describe it?

Lizzy: We say at our heart we are pop artists. We love Beyoncé and for us it is really liberating, because pop can mean anything. These are the first songs we have ever written so a lot of MS MR, and this writing process, is just experimenting. I hope that leaves the door open for us to dabble in anything and everything.
 Max: We want to bring in other genres and other weird sounds and continue to feel really creative, but we also want to make music that people want to hear.


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Friday, August 2, 2013

For Fall 2013, Camouflage is More Visible Than Ever




It’s taken me longer than many to come around to the idea of camouflage as a viable accessories trend. Like I mentioned when we took a closer look at 3.1 Phillip Lim’s camo bags (which I, admittedly, kind of liked), it’s a print that I’ve prided myself on hating for years on end, and I didn’t see that changing anytime soon. Then a pretty little greyscaled Prada tote came along, and that was all it took to flip me. Now camo is definitely on my fall shopping list, and it should be on yours too.

I’m not going to sit here and extoll the virtues of camo in general, mostly because you guys already know that my feelings are mixed. When it’s done properly, though, LV Bags Cheap Wholesale and when it’s done on a piece that really pokes at that soft spot in your skull, you’ll know it. This season offers your best chance to find that piece, whether it’s a bag, a scarf or a pair of shoes – heavyweight designers like Valentino and Manolo Blahnik have added the iconic print to their fall repertoire. Below, we’ve rounded up a bunch of pieces at different price points for your shopping pleasure.

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Expose the mysterious woman with Louis Vuitton

Clothing is a woman heart banner. We all live in their clothes inside. For people who can not speak, clothing is your words. And the love of the same woman bored for bags, bags as your lover, girlfriends, personal stylist, tell your temperament, give you the most endless care. Here we recommend several luxury brand fashion lady bags, classic spread.

Woman's love is reflected bag Maslow's hierarchy of needs - a sense of security is the physical needs above the needs of the human instinct. When the women went out into the wide world from home when it bag, gave them some sort of subconscious emotional support.


Louis Vuitton (Louis Vuitton Bags China Outlet), he is the history of France's most prominent designers of leather goods, in 1854 in Paris, opened his own name the first suitcase shop. A century later, Louis Vuitton luggage and leather goods to become one of the best areas of the brand, and become a symbol of high society. Today, Louis Vuitton brand has not only limited to the design and sale of high-end leather goods and luggage, but to become involved in fashion, accessories, shoes, luggage, jewelry, watches, media, wine and other areas of the giant trend indicators. From the early Louis Vuitton Louis Vuitton suitcase to T stage in Paris a year now constantly changing LV fashion show, Louis Vuitton Louis Vuitton is able to stand in the international fashion industry has been the top position, proud home of luxury brands out, in its own unique brand DNA.

From the early Louis Vuitton suitcase to T stage in Paris a year now constantly changing LV fashion show, Louis Vuitton is able to stand in the international fashion industry has been the top position, proud home of luxury brands out, in its own unique brand DNA. To luxury LV bags known enough to make the classic tradition world! Glossy patent leather material coupled with LV printing, revealing elegant modern contemporary, sleek styling make crisp contours Baoshen has an excellent elegant lines, this package allows luxury with fashion show!

Friday, July 26, 2013

The Must-have Fashion Bags in 2013

Summer is here. Don't YOU wanna be cool and chic in this season? Then you should take a chic bag with you. A must-have accessory in your fashion wardrobe. No matter what the material it is, or what style it is, the point is fashionable enough!

Let's take a look at these awesome bags that you should not miss below.
Bag in Purple would bring the owner kind of charming and noble sense. With simple and clear design, it's good choice for you to hold all the year round.

It's kind ethnic, there's flower's embroidery on it. I love it.

This tote handbag looks gentle. With simple colorway in black and white with brown handles, you can match all your beautiful dresses in the summer. Available for all the year round too. Find related fashion handbags tote here.

This bag would look like a shopping bag. Simple and fashionable.

Color bright yellow shiny you in the crowd. This bag is most suitable for your beautiful evening dresses. 

This tote bag in white is probably the most favorable for fashion girls. It's simple and chic.

Stylish design features this tote handbag. You can hold it on your hand, and take it as a satchel bag too. It could match various kinds of clothing for you.

What do you think is this apple-shaped thing in this picture?

Hey, girls! What do you think is this apple-shaped thing in this picture? 
Just Guess... LOL...



Can you believe that it's a ladie's handbag? I thought anybody who hold it would look amazing.