Designer Evening Dresses
Black Large Vicky Giraffe Print Faux Leather Satchel Bag Handbag Purse
(Apparel) H2W
Silver-tone Hardware.
Interior Zip Pocket.
Cell and Sunglass Pockets. Measures 16L x 11H x 10W inches.
Made by Giraffe Print Faux Leather Material.
Top Zip Closure.
Price:
$91.98
$14.99
Customer Reviews:
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PERFECT BAG!
I recieved this bag today, and at first was absolutely horrified. I thought I was sent the wrong item, because the bag did not appear to be the shape in the image. I realized after opening the plastic that the bag had snaps inside to change the shape of the bag! It's perfect! The bag can change... -
Excellent deal
I wasn't going to buy it untill I read other reviews. And they were right! The best $20+ ever spent! Too bad the seller don't list more photos of the bag. So, let me tell you more about it.The bag has top zipper and magnet closure. It has one outside zipped pocket, two zipped pockets and two...
Haha I'm guessing this is a bit of an odd question, but I'm on a cruise ship and were going to be "crossing the line" (equator) tomorrow and for the ceremony I don't know what to wear.
I'm going to be inducted into a junior sorority tomorrow and I'm not sure what to wear. Basically it's where anyone who has not yet joined the organization needs to make a "sacrifice" haha. The sacrifice in this case is you get messy...
What has this got to do with Singles and Dating?
This book addresses the evidence for the widespread belief that enjoyment of fashion is necessarily inconsistent with feminist values, from a feminist (as opposed to a post-feminist) point of view. It begins by establishing that many feminists in fact hold this belief and argues that disagreeing does not mean claiming that feminism was unnecessary or that it is now rendered redundant by changing social mores. The author describes the historical background as applied to both men's and women's clothing in various cultures, including close reading of the function of clothes in the novels of the Bronte sisters, Thackeray and Dickens, through to the use of fashion as a call to arms for the early feminists, as well as later theorists like Susan Sontag and Naomi Wolf. Issues of personal freedom and political correctness, the claims that fashion makes women sex objects for men, and the charge that the subject is too trivial to merit serious discussion,...
Material Girl
Imagine bandhani done in fine clusters for a stunning effect, ikat with an eyeball-grabbing python skin motif or mushru with stripes of different widths running across in opposing directions… all these unusual twists to our famous textile traditions are some of the fine points of Anaka Narayanan’s coveted separates.
In the quicksand of the fashion world, you rarely meet someone whose creations consciously link the present with the past. Having chosen to work with handwoven textiles and indigenous skills, Anaka’s collections stand out in a market cluttered with designers who can’t think beyond bling or diaphanous mill-made fabrics.
Though handwoven/crafted textiles are a highlight of her work, the designer is forward thinking when it comes to styling. Now, who said handspun isn’t haute? Let's get down to Brass Tacks…
Anaka Narayanan’s home in Alwarpet is every bit a design studio. Swatches of deep-hued ikat and shibori are strewn all over the place. Paper patterns, sketches, mannequins, measuring tapes, sewing kits and heaps of books on textiles form a delightful clutter. A 1960s Singer sewing machine occupies a prime place in her scheme of things. Rusty, but well-oiled and ready to be kick-started, it reiterates the designer’s classic-is-cool aesthetic.