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Imitation Chanel Never mind the billions in profits going to money launderers drug cartels, poverty wages in underdeveloped countries, links to terrorist organizations, theft of creative property, etc; no one will think your fake bag is real so what the point? People buy designer bags because they love the quality, the history of the maker, and feel it makes a statement Badgers 28 Montee Ball Red Rose Bowl Game Stitched NCAA Jersey about them. What statement does a fake bag make about you? The industry of "fake" puts at stake the luxury industry, so the French police is very harsh rightfully and give fine and confiscate things like that at the airport etc. Why not buy something that is not fake, just a lesser known ncaa official basketball French brand. Also Lancel and Longchamp are cheaper than Vuitton/ Chanels I agreee that nobody will think it is the real Crimson Tide Blank White Stitched NCAA Jersey thing if you buy a fake. I saw a documentary about the fake industry and they explained that all the fakes put at stake many jobs you wouldn want to encourage jobs being suppressed just for the sake of a fake bag i imagine. Forget about a fake Chanel it will feel fake for the rest of your life. At the end of the day, you will not like it. Not fun promenading something which is not the right thing. Because even if the others can tell, YOU will know and that the worst thing, because you can fool yourself. A Chanel is a Chanel, and that a dream very few of us will ever obtain. Unless of course you are patient and start saving up. Going for fake only takes the dream out of Chanel (or Dior or Herms or whatever is your secret Heaven).
Broncos 27 Jay Ajayi Black Stitched NCAA Jersey Impact the Little Black Dress Had on Mountaineers 8 Karl Joseph Navy Blue Stitched NCAA Jersey Fashion Coco Chanel is credited with popularizing the little black dress in the flapper era, but she didn t invent it. The Fashion Historian website mentions a first sighting of the term, from the Oxford English Dictionary, in Henry James 1902 "Wings of a Dove": "She might fairly have been dressed tonight in the little black frock . that Milly had laid aside." Still earlier, Victorian beauty Lillie Langtry was said to have captured the attention of Pre Raphaelite painters and later the Prince of Wales, after appearing everywhere in a plain little black dress amid more colorful socialites. Just as Lillie Langtry originally wore her black dress as mourning apparel, World War I widows paved the way for the little black dresses of the 1920s. Parisian Coco Chanel streamlined the more ornate, beaded or embellished black gowns from earlier in the decade think "Downton Abbey" ncaa gear shop style and included the LBD as one component every modern woman should have in her wardrobe. In 1926, when "Vogue" published a picture of Chanel s simple crepe de Chine dress with pearls, the magazine said it was to fashion what Ford was to cars: "the frock that all the world will wear." By 1944, the magazine proclaimed that "Ten out of ten women have one." Women embraced the little black dress, as Chanel intended they would. What was different "was the idea that a dress can be used in different situations and ncaa baseball jerseys can be changed by the addition of accessories," said fashion historian Florence Muller, quoted on the Expatica website. It saved time and money. Suddenly, fashion was democratic and women of modest means could be chic too. Mail order versions of Paris fashions found their way into American homes after a lag time of a couple years, "Smithsonian" acknowledges. Model Romilly Collins wears the classic black Givenchy gown made for Audrey Hepburn in "Breakfast at Tiffany s." The dress sold at the Christie s auction house in London. The LBD didn t lose its luster when it became popular. In fact, designers from Schiaparelli to Dior to Givenchy gave it annual updates, changing the shape and hemlines with the times. It attained icon status a second time with Audrey Hepburn s ultra glamorous take as Holly Golightly in the 1961 "Breakfast at Tiffany s." |