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Showing posts with label Tano Handbags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tano Handbags. Show all posts
Sunday, 25 May 2008
Work, play, every day - Tano Camera Ready Leather Messenger Bag 3797
Thursday, 15 May 2008
Tano goes woven - Tano Beauty Gram Woven Hobo 3916
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Friday, 9 May 2008
The Perfect Travel Buddy - Tano Homemade Celebrity Messenger Bag 3873
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Wednesday, 7 May 2008
The Beauty of the Handmade Designer Handbag
by Monique E.
As Designer handbags continue to serve both as fashion and function, there will always be the latest bag which exceeds thousands of dollars with an army of bag lovers ready to admire. Most seem to sway towards the actual handmade designer handbag.
Is it the fact that the handmade as opposed to machine made are more limited and can even boil right down to one of a kind? A handmade handbag can accent your outfit to perfection. Its a guarantee that a women gets a nice compliment about her new designer handbag only making her confidence rise. That's the beauty of a handmade handbag. Not only with this, but the one size fits all thing is just great! No change room line ups, or attempts to jump down a size, usually just a visual scan and then a slight dream of what outfit could be worn with the designer handbag of choice.
It's all these little things that us women can relate to and be thankful that we have such wonderful accessories to admire! Handmade handbags continue to top the charts in the accessories market. Some research groups along with my instincts say it should stay that way! Long live something, anything that is handmade in this day and age!
Designer Purse Trend Carries On
Having a nice designer handbag or purse can be a fashion statement or a wealth statement, depending on your point of view. Young female celebrities have made it so popular to carry these high priced beauty's. So people buy these designer purses and use them to up their social status...so what? Some say it is just ridiculous, but how could they say that! It's the little things in life, well ok maybe not that little. Hey it just makes me feel good for some reason to get a new purse!
So with the replica thing is this also upping the status of the owner of the true designer purses? Is this helping us or hindering us in the designer handbag world. Its tuff to say. Here is a related article: Piracy Experts Tainting the designer handbag world? It's just really sad seeing such a god awful amount of replicas rolling around. Just thinking of fakes makes me shudder. Oh well, with there being enough of us true enthusiasts who absolutely refuse to have anything to do with these fakes, the designer purse & handbag industry should continue to boom.
Carrying a designer handbag means a female has something of quality and style. Designers come up with new lines and collections all the time, so these designer handbags will always be popular. Years from now, designer handbags will still be trendy because of the look and what it stands for.
As Designer handbags continue to serve both as fashion and function, there will always be the latest bag which exceeds thousands of dollars with an army of bag lovers ready to admire. Most seem to sway towards the actual handmade designer handbag.
Is it the fact that the handmade as opposed to machine made are more limited and can even boil right down to one of a kind? A handmade handbag can accent your outfit to perfection. Its a guarantee that a women gets a nice compliment about her new designer handbag only making her confidence rise. That's the beauty of a handmade handbag. Not only with this, but the one size fits all thing is just great! No change room line ups, or attempts to jump down a size, usually just a visual scan and then a slight dream of what outfit could be worn with the designer handbag of choice.
It's all these little things that us women can relate to and be thankful that we have such wonderful accessories to admire! Handmade handbags continue to top the charts in the accessories market. Some research groups along with my instincts say it should stay that way! Long live something, anything that is handmade in this day and age!
Designer Purse Trend Carries On
Having a nice designer handbag or purse can be a fashion statement or a wealth statement, depending on your point of view. Young female celebrities have made it so popular to carry these high priced beauty's. So people buy these designer purses and use them to up their social status...so what? Some say it is just ridiculous, but how could they say that! It's the little things in life, well ok maybe not that little. Hey it just makes me feel good for some reason to get a new purse!
So with the replica thing is this also upping the status of the owner of the true designer purses? Is this helping us or hindering us in the designer handbag world. Its tuff to say. Here is a related article: Piracy Experts Tainting the designer handbag world? It's just really sad seeing such a god awful amount of replicas rolling around. Just thinking of fakes makes me shudder. Oh well, with there being enough of us true enthusiasts who absolutely refuse to have anything to do with these fakes, the designer purse & handbag industry should continue to boom.
Carrying a designer handbag means a female has something of quality and style. Designers come up with new lines and collections all the time, so these designer handbags will always be popular. Years from now, designer handbags will still be trendy because of the look and what it stands for.
Tuesday, 6 May 2008
Finalists Selected for the Independent Handbag Designer Awards
Handbag Designer 101 Honors Excellence at the Second Annual "Handbag Awards"
New York, NY (PRWEB) May 3, 2008 -- Handbag Designer 101, the handbag designer resource, announces today the long awaited results of the finalists for the Independent Handbag Designer Awards. Over 600 applications were received from around the world ranging with diverse backgrounds from South Dakota to Colombia to Lithuania. The Independent Handbag Designer Awards is the only design competition of its kind in the world for handbag designers to receive credibility and recognition to stand out in today's competitive accessory market. The winners will be announced on June 18th at the IHDA event at the New York Historical Society.
Finalists compete for a variety of prizes such as an apprenticeship with Henri Bendel's handbag accessory design team for the Best Student Made Handbag; an opportunity to have their bags on Bag Borrow or Steal for the Audience Fan-Favorite, to design an original 360 Vodka eco-luxury handbag for the Best Green Handbag; a feature in Taunton Press' CraftStylish.com and a brand new Singer Curvy 8763 sewing machine for the Best Handmade Handbag; a chartable donation to their cause for the Most Socially Responsible Handbag, their bag featured on ABC's All My Children and a free booth at WWDMAGIC Accessories Show in Las Vegas (worth over $7000) for the Best Handbag in Overall Style and Design as well as other press-related accolades, a trunk show and being part of a trunk show and window display at Henri Bendel in addition to being named the best in their respective category.
"These 25 designers whether they are established or emerging, share a common passion, commitment and creativity to make a unique handbag while being role-models for entrepreneurship and small business," says Emily Blumenthal, founder of Handbag Designer 101 and the Independent Handbag Designer Awards. "Each designer is well deserved in their recognition for in each category of Best Student-Made Handbag, Best Handmade Handbag, Most-Socially Responsible Handbag Best Green Handbag, and Best Handbag in Overall Style and Design."
These 25 finalists were chosen by a preliminary judging panel of Handbag Designer 101. The winners of each category will be selected by a prestigious group of individuals. They are Ann Watson (Fashion Director at Henri Bendel), Lisa Smilor (Associate Director for the Council of Fashion Designers of America), Dani Stahl (Style Director of Nylon Magazine), Dana Palzkill (Senior Vice President of Product Management for Bag, Borrow or Steal), Rebecca Weinberg (Emmy Award Winning costume designer and stylist), David Zyla (3-Time Daytime Emmy Nominated Costume Designer for ABC Inc./All My Children) and Julia Poteat (Assistant Professor of Fashion Methods for Parsons The New School for Design) will decide who has created the "Top Handbag Design" and select a winner from each respective category. These finalists, whose bags all must be made under their own label, representing a wide range of styles and designs, in each category are:
Best Student Made Handbag - The finalist's bags are students who have successfully started their lines while still in school. This award will be presented by Ann Watson, Fashion Director at Henri Bendel.
- Rebecca Allen, Rebecca, AI Miami University, Florida
- Lissa Jooijman, Hydralis, Technical University Eindhoven, The Netherlands
- Dana Van Daele, Grey Sunshine, The Fashion Institute of Technology, New York
- Clara Yoo, C L A R A Y O O, Parsons The New School for Design, New York
- Lina Motoki, Lina Motoki, Parsons The New School for Design, New York
Best Handmade Handbag - The finalist's bags must be sewn, crocheted, knitted or any other material where the designer themselves is making their bag by hand or machine. This award will be presented by Debbie Stoller, Author of the Stitch 'N Bitch Series and Founder of Bust Magazine.
- Renee Parrill, Flamestitch
- Dawn Kelly, Dawn Kelly
- Laura Nelli, Nelle
- Shara N. Brown, Accessory Niche
- Darren Wallace, Darren Wallace
Best Green Handbag - The finalist's bags that are made out of sustainable, recycled or organic materials. This award will be presented by Allyn Feldman of McCormick Distilling's 360 Vodka.
- Evelina, Vegan Queen - Eco Luxury
- Tracy Penwell, Dressed Up Cat Fashion Re-fashioned
- Jonathan Marcoschamer, Ecoist
- Suzanna Scarola, Bellabags
- Nazly Villamizar, NAZLY VILLMIZAR
Most Socially Responsible Handbag - The finalist's bags meet certain ethical and moral standards in regards to production, employment and philanthropy and have impacted the local culture of the country of manufacturing. This award will be presented by Kendall Farrell, Executive Director of the Bottomless Closet.
- Christiane Valdez, La Chica Chic, Made in Brazil
- Nyasha Manyonda, Afrobag, Made in Zimbabwe
- Qy: Caroline Swarbrick and Marie De Ryck, Hatti Trading, Made in Nepal
- Jamila Hubbard, Mad Imports, Made in Madagascar
- Bridget Reid, PFYH, Made in Canada via Peru
Best Handbag in Overall Style and Design - This category represents the best executed handbag in overall style and design and will be presented by IHDA, Jana Hanci, CEO of LaunchBags.
- Julie Lazarus, Elezar
- Wendy Lau, Edidi
- Diego Rocha, Diego Rocha,
- Georgia Thompson, mass london ltd
- Lui Antinous, Lui Antinous
The final category to be celebrated is "Audience-Selected Handbag" where fans can vote for their favorite independent Handbag designer based on the 25 finalists on Handbag Designer 101 and Bag Borrow or Steal. This award will be presented by BBoS' Chief Marketing Officer, Jodi Watson. This designer that received the most votes will be announced the night of June 18th at the IDHA event with the other category winners. These aforementioned category finalists' work can be seen at http://www.handbagdesigner101.com/awards/finalists_2008.
Legendary Handbag brand LEIBER will receive the IHDA ICONOCLAST Award. For 45 years, LEIBER has been a leader in luxury accessory design. Currently, LEIBER has broadened its customer base by evolving the product to meet the needs of a younger customer while remaining true to its heritage. LEIBER has stood the test of time and continues to earn international acclaim with their innovative handbags and accessories, and most recently selected as "Most Prestigious Handbag" by the Luxury Institute's Luxury Brand Status Index and will be presented by its CEO, Milton Pedraza.
The main underwriting sponsor of the IHDA is LaunchBags, the one-stop shop for all things handbag. From inception to sale, their services support, emerging and established talent in the accessories industry. Additional sponsors include: Women's Wear Daily, The Luxury Institute, WWDMAGIC, Bag Borrow or Steal, Henri Bendel, The Fashion Business Improvement District: The Fashion Center, Commerce Bank, Rosenthal & Rosenthal Inc., The Garment Industry Development Corporation, Parsons The New School of Design, Wathne Limited, M&J Trimming, TUKATECH, Leather Suede Skins, Rosen & Chadick Fabrics, RIRI Zippers/Pacific Trimmings, Verve NYC, Digital Plus, Clothing Labels 4U.com, 360 Vodka, Glaceau, POM Wonderful, Casa de Vinos and the Bottomless Closet.
For complete information or to purchase tickets for the Independent Handbag Designer Awards, check out www.handbagdesigner101.com or www.hbd101.com.
Handbag Designer 101, the handbag designer resource, was inspired by the need for the handbag designer, aficionado and fan in all of us as one knows we can never have too many bags. Handbag Designer 101 and Independent Handbag Designer Awards trademarks are owned by handbagdesigner101.com, a privately held company based in New York City.
Thursday, 24 April 2008
Tano Bauhaus Leather Tote 3255
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Wednesday, 16 April 2008
Tano Made in Form Messenger Bag 3417
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Saturday, 12 April 2008
The never ending Tano bag story
Tano handbags are more leather than anything else. This season, Tano is introducing a woven fabrication in an array of metallic finishes. We'll post the photos once the bags are available. As for right now, Click here for more details.
Thursday, 3 April 2008
How To Find The Perfect Handbag
By Mary Olaya
Let's be honest. These days there are hundreds of handbag styles to choose from. So as a consumer, where do you begin? Do you follow the fashion experts? Does the latest It handbag necessarily mean you must have that bag this season? Do you choose one that compliments your figure and works well with your wardrobe? Or do you choose quality with an affordable price tag?
Well, the answer is Yes - for all of the above. But there are also other factors to consider too.
Trying on a handbag is just as important as trying on clothes. Where your handbag rests will actually draw the most attention. If someone is glammed up, the first detail others will notice is accessories, most likely your handbag. A handbag can make or break your look.
The most important factor to consider when choosing the right handbag for your body type is Size and Shape. That choice is more difficult for tiny and shorter ladies.
Small and classic handbag shapes generally work best. Focus on smaller handbags that fit tightly and comfortably underneath your shoulder. It's all about proportion. Stay away from large, rectangular shapes. Small shoulder handbags are a great alternative. They work perfectly with figure proportions and add length to the body and arms. More defined round shapes, such as the gaucho & silverado styles, work too.
Also consider the handles and their positioning. The handle drop should not have too much. A handbag that sits below your hips will make you appear shorter. If you need a sling/messenger bag, be sure the shoulder strap is adjustable and let the bag rest near your hips and no lower. Avoid oversized, bulky bags unless you need an overnight or weekender. Big sizes will not flatter your shape.
Another perfect alternative is clutches. Go for different colours and styles. Clutches are versatile during the day and will carry all your necessities in the evening.
There are also limitations for taller ladies. Although they have a height advantage, some styles still won't work. If you're tall or slim, your long limbs work well for more rectangular and square structured shapes, such as motorcycle and paddington styles.
If you're not already a fan of oversized bags, get cracking. Oversized handbag are definitely - In. Fashion has embraced the oversized trend in handbags and clothing lately. What's the best tip? It's what our parents told us for years. Less is more. So consider a bag that's not too oversized. Don't go over the top. Go for box styles or rectangular shapes. The biggest blunder many make with these styles is practicality. Never carry an oversized bag empty. Oversized bags look flat and empty with just your wallet and keys inside. Use these bags as a useful shopping tote. Now, that's just plain easy.
Never let an oversized shoulder bag sit pass your hips. Straps should be short or adjustable. Not only will the bag look better, but its weight won't put pressure on your lower back. It's important for you to move comfortably and easily.
Let the handbag speak for itself. Do the inside compartments hold all your necessary essentials? Do you like its style and overall look? In the end, you have to be happy. After all, a handbag should be a girl's best accessory, not a burden.
Wednesday, 2 April 2008
Why fashion has gone off the rails
designer purses 3506. Never boring. Never dull.
Tano Handbags are colorful bold statements!
Sarah Mower, Telegraph UK
Never mind the credit crunch, high street retailers are in a bad way because their clothes are bland and badly made from poor fabrics, says Sarah Mower
Has fashion apocalypse hit the high street?
You scarcely need to listen to the biblical chorus of retailers blaming the credit crunch, the weather, energy bills (anything but themselves) to see the evidence that this spring women have risen up, taken a look round the shops, pulled a face - and kept their plastic in their purses.
Clock the fact that the "mid-season sale" has arrived in so many places before the "season" has even got going (with barely a moment to clear winter's discounted leftovers) and there's only one thing to conclude: sorry, but we just don't like these clothes that much.
As Womenswear Daily, the trade oracle of US fashion, put it last week: "fashion had it coming". In an industry that is usually so supportive of its own (often to the point of sycophancy), you don't normally hear this kind of talk. Actually, make that never. But, at the designer level, buyers have finally broken ranks, criticising insane prices, drab colour, the wrong fabrics, deliveries of coats in high summer and bikinis in January, plus the fact that women are "programmed to wait for sales".
Most devastatingly to my mind, though, is the pointing of fingers at the lack of a general trend that is powerful enough to override all external constraints and make us run to the shops.
It's as simple as this: unseasonal weather and financial panic apart, these days you have to be in love with something to want to buy it. That applies as much to the merchandise on the high street as it does to the contents of department stores, where price tags for not-even-that-special dresses broke into four figures ages ago. And much as our high street giants keen and wail about plunging consumer confidence, rising mortgage rates and monumental credit card debt, they are failing on that front.
A horrible combination of bland styles (they're terrified to commit to anything "extreme") and the flimsiest, worst-quality fabrics that I have ever seen (blame China) has swept the stores. Frankly, in some cases, I'll be surprised if they're able to give the stuff away.
I know this because last week, with a light step, I set out with my daughters, aged 14 and 12, for an Easter holiday spree in the West End. OK, I am not that much in the mood for spending, but even fear of bank statements has to be reined in when two girls have grown out of most of their clothes.
So we did Zara, H&M, Gap, Warehouse, Uniqlo, Miss Selfridge and Topshop. When I say that after four hours we returned with a solitary sleeveless sweater found in the back of the Regent Street Gap, you can judge just how bad it was.
It was not that I was saying "no" to them. As we dragged ourselves ever more despondently from shop to shop, there were no hissy fits, only ineffable teenage sneers as they rejected tacky dresses in see-through fabrics, badly made jackets, limp knitwear, nasty jeans and miles of last season's smock tops and boring T-shirts - dozens of which are already stuffed in their cupboards.
In the end, I was the one trying to herd them into changing rooms with arms full of not-quite-right stuff that might turn out to be just this side of OK when tried on. Nothing worked.
We'd have all gone home in tears were it not for the fact that the 14-year-old insisted we went to Abercrombie & Fitch, where you do at least get a good gander at "fit" boy sales assistants with their shirts off. When it came down to it, she didn't love anything there, either, but it cheered us up a bit.
I was so disturbed by this experience that I went back to check other stores. I found a couple of spots of brightness: Reiss looked confident, French Connection vastly improved; I liked the little black dress collection at Oasis, and a couple of Osman Yousefzada's limited-edition pieces for Mango.
I could also understand why Inditex, the parent company of Zara, is reporting strong sales in the teeth of the downturn. Zara has always left me cold, but Inditex also owns Massimo Dutti, which does grown-up Euro-smart well, and it's opening hundreds of stores globally, an accounting fact that makes its figures look good.
Otherwise - since we are now in the mood for plain-speaking - I must be honest. From M&S on, most of the high street is now one long drag of clothes that insultingly underestimate a woman's taste, self-esteem and tolerance of rubbish fabrics and terrible fit. The phrase "the race to the bottom" - that thing retailers have been calling rampant price deflation ever since Chinese cheapo manufacturers came on the scene - kept coming to mind as I looked around.
Well, the bottom's been hit. And the ones who have "won" that race - all those greedy, cynical retailers who have lost touch with the value of great shop-keeping and what makes women love fashion - are, when the figures come out, about to be proved the biggest losers.
• I know it's about time we all shut up about Madame C B-S, but I can't help putting my two ha'p'worth in about her crying need for no-heel footwear.
Frankly, she hasn't sorted it out for evening - peep-toed ballerinas just don't do it with a state-occasion gown - but the solution is staring her in the face: Alexander McQueen's embroidered and bejewelled slippers (above left), shown in Paris a few weeks ago.
Oh, and why doesn't she get one of his white muslin directoire dresses while she's at it? Couldn't be more perfect for playing Josephine to her little Napoleon.
• Since "low-ticket" items - things that give a practical buzz for little outlay - are said to be the ones that will keep selling even in a depression, I've put myself on alert to track down fashion bits and pieces that qualify.
Here's the first: a custom-made pair of Nike trainers, a little piece of up-cheering bespoke footwear. When put to their intended use, they will a) save money when you run everywhere instead of taking public transport or driving; b) help the planet by cutting carbon emissions; and c) help release mood-enhancing endorphins to fight off depression.
Amazingly, this virtuous package costs a mere £90, after you make an appointment at the design studio at Niketown in Oxford Circus to conjure up your own pair on screen. You get to play with a fantastically vibrant range of summer colours and the shoes get delivered in two to three weeks. Being phobic about hi-tech trainer culture, I "made" a classic Dunk Lo, coloured it turquoise, purple, green and white, and had my name embroidered in red on the back. Good run for your money, I'd say.
Saturday, 29 March 2008
Designer Purses For Traveling - All You Need To Know
from Designer Purses n Bags
... designer purses for traveling. Read it. Believe me, you will thank me.
If you are a travel buff, who loves land hopping, you should look after your designer purse. Unlike travel bags, designer handbags are not meant for constant use or rough weather. You inadvertently drench yourself – with your handbag in your hand – in a sudden downpour, and most likely that will spell the death bell for your favorite designer purse whatever whether you catch cold or not. In addition, some leather might find it too hard to stand the summer temperatures of Asia and Africa, or even some part of the American continent.
The next important issue is storing or preserving your designer handbags while you travel. You might only need the designer bag for occasions and not for the entire journey. If so, it is obvious that you’ll have to tuck it somewhere in the bag, and the way you do it is crucial. It has to be preserved properly, away from pests and moisture, dust and dirt, and heat of course. In some cases, a small bag with sufficient air circulation will serve the purpose. Another priceless tip is to stuff the designer purse with some tissue paper so that it retains its shape inside the bag.
Finally, don’t keep your designer purses in the open, unattended place, even if it is in your hotel room or the restaurant table when you leave to powder your face for few moments. Doing so actually reduces the chances of somebody will steal it. Unfortunately, we tend to misplace items more often while on travel. Being a bit on guard will save you from saying goodbye to your beloved designer purse.
Saturday, 15 March 2008
The politics of an 'It' bag
From The Sunday Times
When it comes to rebranding an old institution, Samantha Cameron has left her husband standing. Here's a look at why middle England is voting for the Nancy
Kate Spicer
Fans of the Nancy, Smythson’s first It bag, are not what you’d call fashionistas. Yes, Vogue’s decidedly unfrivolous editor, Alexandra Schulman, carries one. But just as likely you’ll find that successful, slightly conservative dressers with a fear and loathing of the brash or ostentatious love their Nancy in a way they could never love a Lariat or a Paddington.
According to Samantha Cameron, Smythson’s creative director – and wife of the Conservative party leader, David – she “wanted to develop a bag with the potential to become a modern classic, focusing on the silhouette and craftsmanship rather than statement logos and hardware”.
The formula seems to be working. For a long time, serious but style-aware women have felt excluded from the fashion funfair. Just because you don’t like the idea of the boxy power suit doesn’t mean you want to prance around looking like a dominatrix dressed in pheasant feathers, à la McQueen. What SamCam offers these women is a “third way”. Because it’s not just Cameron’s bags that the women are after, they rather like her style, too.
As one fashion journalist told me, “She’s not that stylish, she’s not a Jackie Kennedy, but she stands out in today’s political arena because they are all so dull. She’s not showy, she’s tasteful, normal; she’s kinda hip, but not too hip. She treads the middle ground.
“Sometimes, I think fashion people have no idea that 99% of the population have possibly heard of Gucci, but they certainly don’t know who Pierre Hardy is, nor do they care. I can imagine she is a champion for that kind of woman.
There’s not a lot of style role models for normal people.”
“I like the Nancy,” says the agent Jane Brand. “It’s a beautiful classic that doesn’t scream status, and doesn’t have chav written all over it.” Brand bought one of the first Nancys last September to replace the white leather Ferragamo she had been toting in the summer. “I don’t like gold chains or big heavy padlocks. I have owned several discreet Prada bags, but before this one, I had never been tempted by an It bag.”
Brand describes her style as “jeans – be they TopShop or 7 For All Mankind – jackets and little cashmere sweaters”. What does she think of some of the British fashion press’s favourite red-carpet subjects, such as Sienna or Kate? Too skinny, unrealistic and rock’n’roll. Daphne Guinness? “Who has time to put together looks like that?” Tamara Mellon? “Too contrived.” Anyone with surgery, cleavage, big ironed hair or brazen highlights will never be a style icon for Brand, but Cameron does make the grade: “Her style is individual – smart with an edge.”
Simone Finn, 39, is a mother of two and fundraiser for the Boris for Mayor campaign. She describes her style as “fairly conservative: cashmere, Elspeth Gibson, Louboutins, Russell & Bromley flats, Diane von Furstenberg wrap dresses”. She loves the Nancy bag. “I could never bring myself to spend hundreds of pounds on an It bag that looks naff.” But when her husband needed a penitential offering after four shooting weekends away in a row, he chose the Nancy, “because everyone was talking about it and he likes Smythson”.
I have to admit that until I started writing this story, I’d never heard of the Nancy – unlike Finn’s middle-aged accountant husband. I obviously don’t move in the right circles. One owner of the bag, a political player, says that she has “been at events with the Camerons and the women rush up to Sam to ask about the bag – leaving David standing on the side, thinking, ‘Why does nobody want to talk to me about my poll ratings?’ He once said to me, ‘Everywhere I go, there’s someone who wants to talk about the bag – it’s the star of our household.’ ” Unsurprisingly, Cameron herself will not be drawn on the politics of accessories – and, to be fair, as creative director of Smythson for 10 years, slowly edging the old stationery and leather-goods brand into the eyeline of a wider demographic of younger luxury consumers, she was rebranding a stuffy old institution long before her husband was.
And she has, it’s widely agreed, been successful. Another eminent political brainbox and owner of a Nancy was happy to offer up her analysis of the bag’s appeal: “I’d say that it plays to the part of the professional woman’s psyche that wants to feel grown-up and sophisticated, because it is a twist on a classic shape and so understated. It avoids you looking like one of the fashion clones clutching this season’s purple patent. I’m afraid I feel a bit self-conscious talking about the bag, because I do cover politics and it might seem – wrongly – like I was wearing it as part of a Cameron tribal thing.”
The Nancy has, of course, been carefully marketed – not too fashion frightening, not too frumpy mummy. So far, and most famously, television blonde Cat Deeley sported a limited-edition bag for the opening of the Smythson Rodeo Drive store. Beautifully made and luxurious, it’s an understated classic that will run and run. As with the quilting and gold chains on a Chanel bag, the hand-pleated leather and distinctive side clasp are signature features.
Colourful grosgrain clutches are out now, followed by a slouchy Hobo in autumn. Of course, it’s never going to set the fashion world ablaze. As one stylist put it: “It looks like an M&S version of a McQueen bag. Smythson makes conservative bags, it’s like a poor man’s Hermès.”
The idea of a poor man’s Hermès may sound like a joke when talking of a £750 bag (or £950 for the larger version), but when compared to Hermès – its Birkin and Kelly bags start at £2,000 – the Nancy looks like a jolly sensible investment.
Monday, 10 March 2008
Tano Suzie Cue Handbags
from pursenbags
Hi, This is PurseCilla. Recently, Lots of readers and friends had asked me to write a review about Tano handbags. As you know I am an easy to get girl, so here it is :
Tano Handbags is one such handbag brand that had built its customer base over many years. Three generations since its debut, Tano still is a leader in terms of quality, and value for money it offers to its customers. No wonder, a majority of its patrons have been using Tano handbags for many years, and they have never felt like shifting allegiance to any other designer purses brand. In the next few paragraphs, you’ll see one of the popular Tano models available in the market, the Tano Suzie Cue handbag, in brief yet in detail.
The Tano Suzie Cue handbag is of a classical mold. The bag is quite compact with a top zip closer – the main opening – and two slanting side zip pockets, suitable enough to save your tube ticket or something small like your cell phone on a bus ride. The top zip opens into a fully lined interior, consisting of two compartments, contoured by a zipped pocket. The dual shoulder straps, even though looks a bit shorter, augurs well with the overall design. Overall, the Tano Suzie Cue handbag scores above average in all counts.
Finally, on the price front, the Tano Suzie Cue handbag is surely not one of the costliest models available in the market. It is very much moderately priced – or cheaply priced – at around $240. For those looking for a decent handbag at a moderate price tag, the new Tano Suzie Cue handbag might just fits the bill. You could find more about Tano Suzie Cue handbag and other Tano handbag models in the Tano home website.
Hi, This is PurseCilla. Recently, Lots of readers and friends had asked me to write a review about Tano handbags. As you know I am an easy to get girl, so here it is :
Tano Handbags is one such handbag brand that had built its customer base over many years. Three generations since its debut, Tano still is a leader in terms of quality, and value for money it offers to its customers. No wonder, a majority of its patrons have been using Tano handbags for many years, and they have never felt like shifting allegiance to any other designer purses brand. In the next few paragraphs, you’ll see one of the popular Tano models available in the market, the Tano Suzie Cue handbag, in brief yet in detail.
The Tano Suzie Cue handbag is of a classical mold. The bag is quite compact with a top zip closer – the main opening – and two slanting side zip pockets, suitable enough to save your tube ticket or something small like your cell phone on a bus ride. The top zip opens into a fully lined interior, consisting of two compartments, contoured by a zipped pocket. The dual shoulder straps, even though looks a bit shorter, augurs well with the overall design. Overall, the Tano Suzie Cue handbag scores above average in all counts.
Finally, on the price front, the Tano Suzie Cue handbag is surely not one of the costliest models available in the market. It is very much moderately priced – or cheaply priced – at around $240. For those looking for a decent handbag at a moderate price tag, the new Tano Suzie Cue handbag might just fits the bill. You could find more about Tano Suzie Cue handbag and other Tano handbag models in the Tano home website.
Friday, 7 March 2008
history of handbags
from World of Fashion
If we were to trace the origin of handbags, women would likely be surprised to know that they were first utilized by a group of men some 2000 years ago. Although wholesale handbags were not in the scene at this time, men in biblical times did indeed carry the equivalent of what we consider to be the handbags of today.
This practice came to women’s knowledge and from then on, its handbags became completely indispensable. Handbags, purses, or any other kinds of totes will forever be a part of women’s wardrobes. Although some men continue to don handbags occasionally, women have dominated the scene in the handbag industry. No outfit can stand alone without a matching handbag. By far, handbags have encapsulated women’s fashion ever since the first modern versions appeared in France.
Nowadays, handbags were everywhere. Thousands of handbags of all imaginable styles and designs are on the market. Apparently, each kind has found its use in the wardrobe of every woman. And yet, with the overwhelming number of handbags that has emerged year after year and grabbed up by female consumers, there are still many, many more soon to invade women’s fashionable wardrobes. Moreover, handbags designers are proliferating.
From a non-designer label to outrageously priced designer handbags, from a simple and plain masterpiece to shiny and elegantly embroidered handbags, the fashion industry will never cease to crank out new handbags for the market
If we were to trace the origin of handbags, women would likely be surprised to know that they were first utilized by a group of men some 2000 years ago. Although wholesale handbags were not in the scene at this time, men in biblical times did indeed carry the equivalent of what we consider to be the handbags of today.
This practice came to women’s knowledge and from then on, its handbags became completely indispensable. Handbags, purses, or any other kinds of totes will forever be a part of women’s wardrobes. Although some men continue to don handbags occasionally, women have dominated the scene in the handbag industry. No outfit can stand alone without a matching handbag. By far, handbags have encapsulated women’s fashion ever since the first modern versions appeared in France.
Nowadays, handbags were everywhere. Thousands of handbags of all imaginable styles and designs are on the market. Apparently, each kind has found its use in the wardrobe of every woman. And yet, with the overwhelming number of handbags that has emerged year after year and grabbed up by female consumers, there are still many, many more soon to invade women’s fashionable wardrobes. Moreover, handbags designers are proliferating.
From a non-designer label to outrageously priced designer handbags, from a simple and plain masterpiece to shiny and elegantly embroidered handbags, the fashion industry will never cease to crank out new handbags for the market
Tuesday, 26 February 2008
Red Hot
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Wednesday, 20 February 2008
The TANO label
Tano was started in 1947 by Sebastian Giner, an artisan basket and bag maker from the Mediterranean village of Murla, Spain.In 1960, he turned it over to his two sons, Sebastian and Peter. The company enjoyed tremendous success in the 70s and 80s, and was considered to be the top American handbag company for many years during that era. In 2002, Sebastians two sons, Steve and Seb, took over the reigns, bringing with them a bold and fresh new vision for the company. Determined to be the premier line in the mid price fashion handbag market, theyve created one of the sharpest brand revivals ever seen in the industry! Says Seb, This is our third season and we couldnt have imagined such a positive explosion of our business. Weve been selling to lots of the nations most exciting specialty stores, and seeing reorder business as we’ve never seen before. When you have a brand new customer base and 90% of them are either reordering in season or coming back for the new collections thats when you know youve got a unique proposition that nobody in the market can match.
Thursday, 17 January 2008
Working Woman, Work It!
Click here to shop this Tano handbag at 8% off.
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Tano Handbag - Holly Would 3415
Click here to shop this Tano handbag at 24% off.
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Tuesday, 15 January 2008
Tano Handbag - Bed Head 3495
Click here to shop this Tano handbag at 29% off.
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Thursday, 10 January 2008
How Much Does Your Bag Weigh?
Marie Claire Magazine's Joanna Coles
With the new hardware trend, and bags bigger than ever, you may be lugging more than is healthy. Experts say the ideal bag weighs two pounds total (they're dreaming!), and the upper limit is no more than 10 percent of your body weight — for instance, a maximum of 13 pounds if you weigh 130 pounds. We did a weigh-in with three of the season's hot bags.
How close to the cutoff are you?
$1198, Coach; (888) 262-6224
BAG ALONE: 4.45 lbs
WHAT CAN YOU CARRY?
1. Wallet, 0.65
2. iPhone, 0.30
3. MacBook, 5.10
4. Makeup bag, 0.90
5. Planner, 1.10
6. Keys, 0.25
TOTAL WEIGHT: 12.75
$450, Cole Haan; (800) 201-8001.
BAG ALONE: 3.03 lbs
WHAT CAN YOU CARRY? 1. Wallet, 0.65
2. iPhone, 0.30
3. MacBook, 5.10
4. Makeup bag, 0.90
5. Planner, 1.10
6. Keys, 0.25
7. Bottled water, 1.15
TOTAL WEIGHT: 12.48
$89, United Colors of Benetton; (800) 535-4491 for stores.
BAG ALONE: 1.20 lbs
WHAT CAN YOU CARRY? 1. Wallet, 0.65
2. iPhone, 0.30
3. MacBook, 5.10
4. Makeup bag, 0.90
5. Planner, 1.10
6. Keys, 0.25
7. Bottled water, 1.15
8. Sunglasses, 0.35
9. The Almost Moon by Alice Sebold
10. Latest MC issue
TOTAL WEIGHT: 13.70
How close to the cutoff are you?
$1198, Coach; (888) 262-6224
BAG ALONE: 4.45 lbs
WHAT CAN YOU CARRY?
1. Wallet, 0.65
2. iPhone, 0.30
3. MacBook, 5.10
4. Makeup bag, 0.90
5. Planner, 1.10
6. Keys, 0.25
TOTAL WEIGHT: 12.75
$450, Cole Haan; (800) 201-8001.
BAG ALONE: 3.03 lbs
WHAT CAN YOU CARRY? 1. Wallet, 0.65
2. iPhone, 0.30
3. MacBook, 5.10
4. Makeup bag, 0.90
5. Planner, 1.10
6. Keys, 0.25
7. Bottled water, 1.15
TOTAL WEIGHT: 12.48
$89, United Colors of Benetton; (800) 535-4491 for stores.
BAG ALONE: 1.20 lbs
WHAT CAN YOU CARRY? 1. Wallet, 0.65
2. iPhone, 0.30
3. MacBook, 5.10
4. Makeup bag, 0.90
5. Planner, 1.10
6. Keys, 0.25
7. Bottled water, 1.15
8. Sunglasses, 0.35
9. The Almost Moon by Alice Sebold
10. Latest MC issue
TOTAL WEIGHT: 13.70
Marie Claire Magazine's Joanna Coles On How Big Bags Should Be, And Possible Problems
NEW YORK, Jan. 7, 2008(CBS). A recent study discovered that today's women carry twice as much in their handbags as their mothers did.
While previous generations might have carried a wallet, lipstick, and keys, today's women frequently carry everything from cell phones to bottled water.
And even though big handbags are the latest rage, enabling women to carry lots of stuff, they could cause significant health problems.
Joanna Coles highlighted those problems in Marie Claire magazine.
Coles, the magazine's editor in chief, discussed the situation on The Early Show Monday.
Today's woman is often "super-woman" -- mom, partner, business person, host, friend, and more. She isn't leading the life of yester-year. Her life, like her purse, is over-crowded and full. And she "needs" and "wants" a large purse.
Designers conscious of this have turned out some amazing oversized bags and have turned them into the "it" bag.
In general, what makes these bags weigh a lot is the thickness of the leather, the hardware, and even the interior pockets' lining. These are things to watch out for when purchasing a bag. One of the drawbacks about the designer bags is that many of the more expensive ones have more ornate detailing or thicker leather, and so are considerably heavier.
Celebrities have grabbed hold of the trend. Take Nicole Richie, for instance: Half the time, you're not sure who's bigger or weighs more -- her or her bag!
Since large handbags are fashionable, with bargain brands and expensive labels alike offering the bulky bags, and since they're roomy, they can tempt women to carry along those extra sneakers to walk on a lunch break, an umbrella in case of a sudden shower, or even a stock of snacks or a bottle of water.
But, says Coles, just because the space is there doesn't mean women really need to use all of it.
Trouble is -- a cool accessory is turning into muscle mayhem.
Many women are complaining of neck, shoulder and back pain. Physical therapists claim an aggravated neck or shoulder can lead to upper-back problems, from which pain can be felt long after the purse is back on the coat rack. The pain can be felt, they explain, while playing sports, exercising, or even working at the computer.
Other symptoms that your bag is too heavy and creating problems could include tingling fingers and headaches.
Experts suggest avoiding bags that weigh more than three pounds, and say the ideal bag should weigh two pounds, total -- yes -- total! That doesn't seem possible, partially because most of the new, fashionable bags weigh more than three pounds empty!
The absolute maximum should be no more than 10 percent of your body weight, experts emphasize which would mean, for instance, a maximum of 13 pounds if you weigh 130 pounds.
If you have to follow the trend, Coles say, try to buy a big bag, made from light material. Also, experts say to try exercising and stretching your neck throughout the day. Try to avoid overloading your bag. You don't need your entire kitchen sink with you! And try to change the shoulder on which you carry your big bag every ten-to-15 minutes if you're walking around.
D&G
$1,495
3.12 lbs
Burberry
$3,195
4 lbs
Marc Jacobs
$2,850
3.45 lbs
Banana Republic
$248
2.85 lbs
Guess
$115
2.15 lbs
Kenneth Cole
$368
1.85 lbs
H and M
$39.99
1.55 lbs
Neccesary Objects
$56
1.10 lbs
Forever 21
$22.80
1.26 lbs
While previous generations might have carried a wallet, lipstick, and keys, today's women frequently carry everything from cell phones to bottled water.
And even though big handbags are the latest rage, enabling women to carry lots of stuff, they could cause significant health problems.
Joanna Coles highlighted those problems in Marie Claire magazine.
Coles, the magazine's editor in chief, discussed the situation on The Early Show Monday.
Today's woman is often "super-woman" -- mom, partner, business person, host, friend, and more. She isn't leading the life of yester-year. Her life, like her purse, is over-crowded and full. And she "needs" and "wants" a large purse.
Designers conscious of this have turned out some amazing oversized bags and have turned them into the "it" bag.
In general, what makes these bags weigh a lot is the thickness of the leather, the hardware, and even the interior pockets' lining. These are things to watch out for when purchasing a bag. One of the drawbacks about the designer bags is that many of the more expensive ones have more ornate detailing or thicker leather, and so are considerably heavier.
Celebrities have grabbed hold of the trend. Take Nicole Richie, for instance: Half the time, you're not sure who's bigger or weighs more -- her or her bag!
Since large handbags are fashionable, with bargain brands and expensive labels alike offering the bulky bags, and since they're roomy, they can tempt women to carry along those extra sneakers to walk on a lunch break, an umbrella in case of a sudden shower, or even a stock of snacks or a bottle of water.
But, says Coles, just because the space is there doesn't mean women really need to use all of it.
Trouble is -- a cool accessory is turning into muscle mayhem.
Many women are complaining of neck, shoulder and back pain. Physical therapists claim an aggravated neck or shoulder can lead to upper-back problems, from which pain can be felt long after the purse is back on the coat rack. The pain can be felt, they explain, while playing sports, exercising, or even working at the computer.
Other symptoms that your bag is too heavy and creating problems could include tingling fingers and headaches.
Experts suggest avoiding bags that weigh more than three pounds, and say the ideal bag should weigh two pounds, total -- yes -- total! That doesn't seem possible, partially because most of the new, fashionable bags weigh more than three pounds empty!
The absolute maximum should be no more than 10 percent of your body weight, experts emphasize which would mean, for instance, a maximum of 13 pounds if you weigh 130 pounds.
If you have to follow the trend, Coles say, try to buy a big bag, made from light material. Also, experts say to try exercising and stretching your neck throughout the day. Try to avoid overloading your bag. You don't need your entire kitchen sink with you! And try to change the shoulder on which you carry your big bag every ten-to-15 minutes if you're walking around.
D&G
$1,495
3.12 lbs
Burberry
$3,195
4 lbs
Marc Jacobs
$2,850
3.45 lbs
Banana Republic
$248
2.85 lbs
Guess
$115
2.15 lbs
Kenneth Cole
$368
1.85 lbs
H and M
$39.99
1.55 lbs
Neccesary Objects
$56
1.10 lbs
Forever 21
$22.80
1.26 lbs
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