by Nabey Miller ibuysss.com Magazine
It is no secret there are some fashion accessories that one will not be without and that for women is the beloved handbag, well the
Coach Patchwork Turning Out To Be the Most In-Demand Bag Design
The patchwork design has ascertained itself as the most prominent Coach purse style. The design has evolved into a gigantic collection of forms due to the mixed range of disorganized patterned possibilities. Regularly thought to be an old fashioned style the patchwork forms have evidently appeared dissident. However, this view is fictitious with Coach patchwork designs budding into an upmarket range of colorful patterned purses that have grown to be central in the progressive universe of bag fashion styles. The Coach patchwork design is affiliated with an innumerable range of forms including pointy durable denim decorative handbags, aesthetic purses made up of sharp suede rectangles and chic purses consisting of irregular complementary vibrant squarish shapes. What's The Patch Work Design About? The term patch work could be generally described as "serrated designs" where squarish shapes of fabrics are joined in a frenzied manner to make a serrated assortment of shades and colors. Its aesthetic combination of aesthetic shades and colors almost makes it look akin to it is a collection of enshrouded material. Traditional use of the design was in quilting, but it was not long before it was applied to purses. Coach illustrates just one purse label that are sporting a diverse range of patchwork forms. In the past the patchwork motif consisted of standard squares which were sliced in line to ultimately develop a repeated pattern which became the whole design. Yet over many decades the patchwork forms have budded into a variety of very daring items. Coach Patch Work - The Most In-Demand Design? The patchwork style is frequently considered to be stuck in the suburbs of fashion. This is despite the fact that Coach patchwork has become a treasured bag design from Coach. The misguided notion that the patchwork design is an outsider to trendy fashion rings inhibited its progression into mainstream fashion media. This might have been instrumental to its unceasing unseen prominence. Because it has seldom been deemed to be a trendy style, it cannot ever go out of fashion. A Good Coach Patchwork Handbag Coach is a purse brand that has tried to define its image as the popularly priced designer bag fashion company. So although Coach purses are cheaper compared to other purse labels, designer excellence is definitely well preserved. This can be seen in true that stay level without crinkling up with folds. When striving to recognize an artificial bag, crumpling is a trait to watch out for since high-class patchwork forms never crumple.
Emily’s Line Is No Better
Emily Brandle fashion
Line Is No Better Than Her Ruffle Dress according to New York magazine
Emily Brandle's awkward ruffle dress earned her the boot. Now that she's had several weeks between now and when the episode was taped to think about what she did, does she regret not making something less offensive? Of course not! She tells Entertainment Weekly: I was shocked that I got kicked off! What were they thinking? … You know, fashion is subjective. For whatever reason, the judges and/or producers thought it was my time to go. I wouldn't change my dress. You know, I stand by it. She explains she had originally intended for the dress to be entirely covered in ruffles but nixed that idea. Even after Tim Gunn politely expressed that he thought her dress looked kind of crappy, but more ruffles might, well, make it work: [W]hat they don't show is that it's a 20- or 30-minute conversation that you have with Tim … So yes, I did change course after we talked, and I ended up kind of coming back to something that was simpler. I was adding more ruffles, and it just wasn't going where I wanted it to go. It wasn't jelling. She says her Smoke & Mirrors collection, which she's been making with her business partner for a year and a half, is a testament to her talent. Let's take a look at her collection to decide if it really is, hm?
Sony to Pay Louis Vuitton for Past Britney, Da Brat Videos
The new York Magazine reported that The luxury company won another victory yesterday in its never-ending trademark-protection crusade, this time against Sony BMG. In a legal dispute just slightly more glamorous than LVMH's recent ones with eBay, Sony BMG has agreed to pay Louis Vuitton 100,000 euros, or $155,830. Louis Vuitton got upset with the music giant because they used its Toile Monogram and Multicolore trademarks in music videos and on CDs by Britney Spears, Ruben Studdard, and Da Brat. For example, in her "Do Somethin'" video, Britney appears driving through the clouds with her sexy girl entourage* in a pink hummer with a pink dashboard embossed with Louis Vuitton's signature pattern (which flashes on the screen for literally less than a second). "We don't make dashboards," a Vuitton spokeswoman told the Daily News. Though you can still watch the "Do Somethin' " video on YouTube (thank God), Sony BMG has agreed to cease distribution of American Idol winner Studdard's album The Return and pay Louis Vuitton an extra, undisclosed amount of cash in relation to that case. What makes the LVMH legal team seem even more spectacular is they've already won $240,000 in the Spears and Da Brat cases over the last five years. In fact, according to our calculations, with the total winnings minus the Studdard bonus, the company can buy itself, why, 130 airport rolling bags!
Are Erin Wasson’s Jewelry Designs Actually Her Own?
Earlier this year, model and muse to Alexander Wang Erin Wasson launched her own jewelry line called Low Luv. The pieces consist of chains that wrap around the body and cost upwards of $1,000. Wang thought they were so cool, he even used them in his fall '08 runway show in February, right before Wasson's line launched. However jewelry designer Bliss Lau, who has been making similar body chains since 2007, claims Wasson's line is a ripoff of her Bliss line. According to Fashionista, Lau alledges that the pieces worn at Wang's show were Bliss pieces that Wasson merely recast. Scandal!
But the alleged awfulness gets worse: Lau claims that Wasson actually wore an original Bliss piece in the Nylon magazine article about her Low Luv line. And — if Lau's allegations are true — is that the body chains weren't just some of Wang's best accessories, but some of his best inspiration for his fall collection. He says in a Nylon video shot just before February Fashion Week, "A lot of this collection was inspired by holes and chains, mainly because I'm working with Erin, who's designing her own jewelry line starting with this season, and it's going to be introduced in the show. And kind of the idea of it was a lot of body chains and things that wrapped around the body." In other words, the exact concept of Lau's jewelry collection.
We've contacted Wasson's reps and are awaiting comment; in the meantime we'll be cringing.





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