The founders of these fashion houses, and the folks who truly cared about real luxury, have died a long time ago. Now it is just corporate greed coasting on the reputations build decades ago.
@@Itsbabygirlt if I was super wealthy that’s the brands I would look to, not what the famous houses sell because it’s apparent that what they’re selling to the general population has declined in the quality. Why waste thousands of dollars on something that isn’t truly luxury (if that’s what is being advertised)
Love this video, thank you for including the prices I find a lot of videos like this don’t include the prices which is annoying when you are planning a trip. Can’t wait to go there again, there are so many great things in this video *hotdups*
I use my *jklux* as a work bag and have had no issues at all. It’s a comfortable bag, fits a good amount and hadn’t lost its shape. With that being said, I also take care of all my bags and don’t carry a water bottle, pens, keys or anything that can damage the interior.
So... They treat their customers like shit, their products are crap, people are having more and more trouble paying for basic needs so arent buying unnecessary items... Im not surprised these brands are struggling.
I mean that's how they keep the middle class customers on edge. By belittling you they instill insecurities and thus gives you the urge to buy their stuffs to prove yourself.
Hahaha I love that sign in the background, and that pretty candle holder - curious what you were burning (is my 'candle addict' showing lol?!) Such a helpful video, I'm awful at knowing the differences and go thrifting a lot, so I'm always nervous to pick up *HOTDUPS* , jackets, so many others things - ugh! You are always so knowledgeable about these luxury brands. You can definitely notice the high quality stitching.
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated. Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature. I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling.
I work in luxury knitwear, True luxury to me means the best materials, made to measure/bespoke fitting in tailoring, exclusivity for a handful of clients. The mainstream houses don’t offer that and even their „image“ has vanished with production conditions exposed. So we still exist but don’t need to advertise 🙂
@@Itsbabygirlt it‘s an haute couture knittery in Hamburg, Germany working for all well known brands (Hermès, Loro Piana, Chanel, Etc.) as well as private clients. Showing a little bit on my Channel 😎
yesss I know a girl how does handbags really beautiful but too expensive for me I kept contact with her and I told her when I'll finish my studies and become a CPA I'll come back and buy your bags I know the quality will be worth it and I love her design 1000X more then those ''luxury'' brands!
We really need to push for supply chain transparency and actual legislation that holds brands at EVERY level accountable for what's going on in their factories. Everyone from Shein to Dior is getting away with literal human rights violations and it's 2024 and we should be doing better. Great video!
You’re right. Modern day slavery is happening and it’s supported when those who have the power to do things better still uphold systems that trample on peoples basic human rights (Thanks for watching 😊)
For a long time, as Chanel prices have risen, I no longer thought I could afford it. I think I would be happy to have a *HOTDUPS* as a travel bag that I don't have to take care of. By the way, I'm sure no one would have a hard time telling the difference. Thanks for the comparison.
Hi! Two creators I’ve been following in recent months have unwrapped LV Popincourt bags (Tiana Peri and Alyssa from The Gal’s Guide), but their bags are East/West silhouettes. I can’t remember the price, but they both feel like great buys. For a vintage bag, it’s pretty on trend, and I’d love to own an exact *hotdups* .
Yes the color of the *hotdups* is beautiful and it is a great decision, maybe one day they will add feet and straps. It would be nice to have a bigger bag during the colder months when we have to store gloves, beanies, scarves, etc…
Someone at Dior really upset the Italian government..... and so the government decided to take them out. Because THEY ALL do this. Dior is not an exception. I will wager that Chanel is made in even worse conditions and even less valuable.
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated. Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature. I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling
If you can wear a high quality *hotdups* for $200-500 then why not. I am glad to hear that rich people do that because if I was a billionaire or had $500 million in the bank account I would spend the money on the authentic ones. That will never happen.
Ilia kvalito ne estas malsupera al tiuj grandaj luksaj varoj. La fortikeco kaj atento al detaloj rivalas kun la originalaj dezajnistsakoj kaj mi ne povas kredi kiom mi ?paris. ?i estas la perfekta akcesora?o por iu ajn moda knabino! Mi certas, ke mi rea?etos iujn aliajn stilojn kaj kolorojn *jklux*
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated. Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature. I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling.
Me remembering nearly all the bags from the jag collection in *jklux* other apartment on the dimond tray.. I think i watched that video like 40 times. Purse collection goals
I don’t understand the Hermes game. To spend 10k-20K at least to be on the wait list, then they call you in for some ugly and hard to sell bags that you don’t want and you can’t refuse otherwise you will need to spend more to be called in for another bag. Even you got the opportunity to buy a bag, you still need to spend usually the same amount or 1.5 times of the bag’s price on other merchandise to finally own the bag.
Jeffree Star, behind his vault door wardrobe has hundreds of Birkins, and the most expensive he has/had was 500k. Half of a million pounds let that sink in. Even if I won the lottery or Euromillions or even made significant money some other way, no way would I spend it on handbags of that cost. Absolutely no way. I would like to make garments and accessories that are made to last like they used to be. I listen to my 80+ year old Nana how things break and don’t last and how things used to be made to last years ago. I have 1920’s furs and 1960’s dresses still in perfect condition. I would never charge the amount that these designer brands charge. I would like to design and manufacture my items in the UK at a reasonable price, but, is it worth it anymore? I want as many people to comment and give opinions as possible. “Luxury” fashion in general I believe is an overpriced scam paying for the name where the quality that once existed is no longer.
One of my BEST experiences ever was in a Chanel store in Monaco. This was in 2018 so maybe things have changed, but I was around 17, my sister 20, and we thought “fuck it, why shouldn’t we walk into the store?” We are not wealthy. We did not look the part and were clearly kids. The door was locked, they had to open them for you from the inside. We not only got let in, a salesperson offered us champagne or juice right away, he chatted with us, took us upstaris and let us try on jewellery worth 100.000 euros, with hundreds of real diamonds in it, he let us take photos, left us ALONE with the jewellery, he was the nicest person ever, talked to us about Coco Chanel, shared things about himself, gave us his business card, and let us take our time. When it came to leaving, my sister was so amazed and grateful, she wanted to buy a coffee table chanel book we found on one of the tables. It had a price printed on the back, 25 euros or something - she wanted to buy it to remember this experience. When she expressed this, our salesman did not let us buy it, he gave it to us for free, and then led us out of the store through the clothing section of the store so we can windowshop some more. Tom, I do not know your last name, but you have made our summer vacation, our year, and my idea of great customer experience forever. P.S. The content of the video is baffling, i just wanted to share a fond memory
The part on jewelry is spot on !! I'm from a ancien noble french family, and it's a tradition (if you ask for it though) in my family that you get for your 18 or 20th anniversary a signet ring. I was scared it will be to pricey when i looked at handmade high jewelry. But i had an appointment with the last signet ring maker in Paris and the total price was only 1900 euro. 500 euro for the gold and 1400 for the engraving ( which was very difficult to make on my ring since my plate and my hand are particularly tinny). We also saw before an jewelry shop for another expertise and they told us it will cost 8000 euro. They were completely inflating the price. So we settled with the signet maker and it was so worth it. He also explained to me and my father how jewelry makers inflamed the prices. And honestly, as a french i think the blame is on the gouvernment for delocalization of fabrics houses and the strategy of lvhm and Arnault. He destroyed the french luxury houses that he'd buy
They treat their customers like trash because it makes them buy more things. If you tell someone that they can’t afford something in your store, it makes that person want to prove you wrong. So they spend a lot of money trying to show you that they are worthy.
And its easy to use this method on people that are already buying items for the sheer purpose of proving to the world that they have money. This tactic would never work on someone who just wants a quality product.
My sister who doesnt have a job, income stream or a place to live outside our parents place is obsessed with luxury fashion, still living with the belief that the stuff she likes today is to the same standard as 150 years ago. She recieved a Gucci dress for her 18th birthday from our folks and will die on the hill that anything less than that will fall apart or not pass into next season. I buy outfits from little independat marketeers abd second chance stores/op shops in my city which she constantly criticises as "fast fashion" or "built to burn". It absolutely annoys the hell out of me, especially considering i can't convince her that she is a sucker for everything she claims i've fallen for.
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated. Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature. I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling
I grew up middle class, and when I became an adult, I made quite a bit of money. And then I got divorced and lost almost everything. I was poor for quite a while. And I met my new husband, and he has made a lot of money in his life. at this point, I have learned that no matter how much fancy stuff you buy, it won't fill the hole. It won't make you happy long-term. This is why I go to the Goodwill's and Salvation Army's near fancy neighborhoods in my area and I get all of this stuff for under $10. ❤❤
These big fashion houses- which were a long time ago based on art and high quality- are now major corporations which are following profits above all else. They are driven by greed: they raise prices to the maximum while reducing quality to the minimum, and invest heavily in mass psychological manipulation to convince folks to buy their overpriced products.
I come from a country where the gem and jewellery industry has been thriving for over a thousand years, so I grew up around beautiful gem and gold jewellery pieces that are high quality too. Just last week, a friend showed me her Van Cleef bracelet, and I was lowkey angry at the price tag?! The thing is , I've found the same design, with pure gold, in our own country for so much less. It just pissed me off that these big "designer" brands get away with charging so much when our local artisans offer less value for real quality. (We're Srilankan btw)
Van Cleef is the ugliest jewellery I have ever set eyes upon. Secondhand costume jewellery from eBay is so much prettier than van Cleef, and even the real solid gold and diamond ones are more affordable.
Recently I’ve realized that the highest quality in clothing and service can come from a small business rather than a luxury brand. Small businesses are so ambitious, and I feel that reaching the top has made luxury brands loose a sense of what they were when they all started out, in both quality and service.
90-95% of the cost of the "luxury" products goes towards huge marking budgets (the biggest item because the logo is all important), fancy stores, management and big profits. Only a small fraction of the final price actually goes towards making the actual item. These brands are all about hype...and little else.
Go to the small business designers. Good quality and will last. Not well known but amazing quality that what I look for. O and usually it’s 1/2 the price of luxury brands.
I can’t be the only one that feels that Birkin bags are neither classy nor luxurious anymore? I feel like the Hermes games have the opposite effect on exclusivity. Every influencer and their mom is frothing at the mouth to get into the birkin club, so much so that they’ll take out loans to get the ugliest, most humiliating bags. Birkins aren’t a symbol of class and wealth anymore, but of middle class desperation. You’d think a brand that presents itself as the pillar of craftsmanship and luxury, would want customers that had the self-respect to walk away from the disrespect of getting purposely offered ugly items
Birkin bags has always been the desperation for middle class ever since the influencers and other people boost its popularity, even before social media days. Never trust luxury brands taken and funded by LVMH after their origin creators has passed or retired. The quality has gone down a lot as well.
Majority of influencers have fake bags anyway, they’re not easy to get in shops so there’s no way each of the, have the original black or brown bag, the most popular colours!
I think one of the worst things to happen to the fashion industry (and I'm semi-generalizing here) is the value of profit over art. It's true what you said in the intro, that "luxury fashion" started off as custom creations for the few high-society, rich people who could buy them. That's what French couture was back then. But because fashion is not just art, but also practical, clothing has to be practical and that means the reality of producing garments is that it will ALWAYS be tied with capitalism. We can't untangle it from capitalism because realistically, the only way for a brand to have longevity is through commercial success and what this leads to is these giant groups buying these brands and consolidating them into one giant umbrella (ex: LVMH, Kering) and not understanding that the success of a fashion brand DOES still rely on the quality. They want numbers and they want them quick and that's just not how it works. If the price of "luxury goods" is going to be what it is going to be, every step of creation of the garment/accessory/product should reflect that price point as well. Did not know about the Hermes Game and that's just bonkers. That's on a different level of being rich just because of the amount of money you have to spend, but it is honestly kind of ingenious. Hermes has always been perceived as the luxury of luxury in handbags and the entire experience reflects that. About the sales associates though, I always wonder if it's intentional to treat people that way or if the employees somehow think they're above others?? Very strange. Balenciaga has lost the plot. It used to be about performance art that still managed to feel like practical clothing and about shock value of going against traditional fashion rules and mores. But the continued use of shock value for everything from campaigns to the runway has become not only stale, but almost annoying. Idk about their numbers but I honestly can't imagine that they've been doing well lately. Their consumer base isn't like other brands, so I have a hard time imagining who they sell to or think they're marketing to and who actually buys their products. Seems like the only way they keep relevancy and maybe their numbers up as well is by making sure people are talking about them, whether in good or bad light. I had never heard of Cucinelli and it makes me think of something ironic. Back then, when all the brands we know today like Chanel, Dior, LV, etc were starting off it really was about the passion to want to make money yes, but also to produce a luxury product that felt worth the price and that was NOT marketed to the layman, but to the rich and high society individuals. And now? There are outlets of all the big brands, you can walk into a department store and see these brands, you can walk into a mall and buy one, even in lower-middle class to middle class areas, it is normal to see an LV bag here, a Dior bag there, an MK bag on a working class women. These brands that paint themselves as being oh so luxurious and coveted are pedestrian brands. Because it is entirely true that the rich people who are really truly rich are not buying these brands, they are buying from labels we will likely never hear of. But its funny how when they also have the opportunity to spend their unethical money ethically, they still don't. Sorry for the long comment, fashion is my favorite thing in the world and I'm very happy to see this type of video from you. It's funny timing, I very recently decided on a career change into the fashion industry and here comes this video lol. I do want to say though, one brand I really like is Loewe. I haven't done an insane amount of research on them, so I could be wrong but they do seem to have a genuine focus on craftsmanship, particularly when it comes to their accessories.
@@sansonaxy_4974 there was a time where materials were very hard to come by. So even a peasants had to make their own clothes with any fabric they could get their hands on. Rich people could afford other people to make their clothes and that became couture. However the peasants couldn’t just buy new clothes so they had to alter and take really good care of the clothes they did have. Vs today where clothes have become disposable. Oh there’s a hole in the shirt just order one online for $5. The value of clothing to a person is very diminished. As far as Balenciaga doing well, it seems they’ve gained an Asian audience. They’re doing well money wise considering they just rehired Demna to stay as creative director. If they were hurting money wise I’m pretty sure the board would have fired Demna and gotten someone new especially after the scandals.
So many things have lost their value because profit/attention was put over art, it’s a grim reality. But I understand why some do that, they don’t get attention without doing something crazy! Also don’t apologize for the long comment, I read the whole thing 😊 and goodluck in your pursuit of a career in fashion, it’s never too late to start and the sky’s the limit!
Industries in Socialist countries also want profit. The difference is greed. Instead of workers owning shares, its usually just whatever new CEO and managers trying to earn as many bonuses on earning profits as they can. In a good economy, they would be creative and find a good marketing strategy. But the easiest way is to cut costs. And every company is doing it. If they dont increase sales, they dont earn bonuses. Thats whynyou see companies earning more and more while their employees income and benefits stagnate and dont keep up with inflation, work load increases, and may even lose benefits.
What a great comment! I read the whole thing. I like Loewe too! Their own page has a lengthy histoire to read, they have their own leather factory and school in Madrid, very interesting. I am eyeing a Loewe bag on Vestiaire - 2nd hand, so even better!
The middle class and "poor" buy luxury brands. The woman who showed her defective Chanel bag in the intro? Notice she had to mention she had opened the bag to remove her keys for the valet 🤣 If that were her actual life she would have just said she opened her bag. Period. She wouldn't have the need to make sure everyone knew she was dealing with a valet
My ex boyfriend works in fabrication of cosmetics in France, with customer brands named in this video, so he told me that the brands buy raw materials deliberately in huge quantities, because it is cheaper than small amounts, even knowing that they won’t use the whole quantity, they send it to this factory and then tell them to get rid of the rest of the material, he told me the quantity being destroyed is scandalous, but it is cheaper for the brand than any other option.
You are good at this. Took me forever to watch this but I did it. I dislike what I call glamour luxury but do spend my dollars on activewear (Lululemon) and outdoor clothes (Patagonia/ arcteryx) for example. Love your work can't wait for the next!
In Asia, there are many smaller high quality brands, that look as good or better and are outstanding quality moree than the "luxury brands." I use my stuff, I want it to look good, I don't care about a label, I care about it being durable and functional.
I wanted to buy a 18kt gold Cartier ring because I thought it would hold the value more than a luxury handbag that goes out of style. The ring cost 1.300€ but if I wanted to sell it for its gold value I would only get 250-280€. I decided to not buy it and buy gold from a local jeweller. The price-value was much more balanced.
Buying vintage premium/luxury is so much better. You don't support new production for unethical conglomerates like LVMH, or support low-pay, poor quality products. There are some exceptions like Chloe's move to become a B-corp which seems to still be producing high-quality goods. But largely, the craftsmanship is, overall, in the toilet and the quality even from 20 years ago is leagues better. Plus you get a lower price for better quality (ex. old Coach styles, YSL, Gucci etc are seriously so, so, so much better). The same goes for jewelry. The new Cartier Trinity rings look and feel like hot garbage but the old ones weigh more, and look expensive as f**k.
Vintage can be a good option, because of the craftsmanship that was in older pieces. Plus, it’s a win-win when you can find high-quality items at lower prices
I like to find small business seamstresses and order basic shirts & skirts. They're not target or walmart cheap, but they're not hundreds or thousands of dollars either. They *are* high quality regardless, and the money goes to a person or a small team of people.
The quality of this video is really good!! Thank you for making this I didn't know some of the information that you said and I'm shocked to hear some of them especially the hand embroidery part
I have seen your videos come up in the past, but this is the first one I think I've watched completely and WOW! You have done an absolutely stellar job, from research, to sources, to examples, to analysis. Fantastic work, you've definitely earned a fan and a subscriber. Looking forward to looking through your backlog of videos, and will keep an eye out for more of your work in the future.
non-related to the topic but this video made me subscribe to you omg! I love your way of executing the topic, it's both for those into fashion and those who doesn't know much about it. it's between subjective and objective n I loved it. gonna binge ur channel now
You have quickly become one of my favorite creators! Your content is always informative, relevant and thoughtful. Thank you for all of your hard work! 🤗
Good afternoon: Ummm I'm the same. Half of the designers products are worthless & fake. But claim to be real & worthy. You might look beautiful & lovely but is it actually worth it...?? And why..??
Very informative and intelligent apprising of the fashion industry. Thank you so much and well done. Hands down beat the usual UA-camrs ie. Cassie Thorpe etc with your reporting and research. I’m going to subscribe and hope a lot of others interested in this field do so too. You deserve your place here . ❤
Just wanted to express gratitude towards your efforts in providing detailed information in this video! I very much enjoyed being a part of your audience!
The rich buy luxury fashion, just not the ones plastered with logos. Were talking 7000 dollars Loro Piana cashmere sweaters without a label, not a Guccibelt that the "poors" are able to save up money for.
This isn’t always true either. I’m sure there’s rich people who like logo items or even dupes. Like the logo but not the prices tag so they spend money on making more money. 🤔
The rich ain’t buying loro piana, only idiots are. Loro piana’s quality isnt the best either and they were caught not paying their workers in Peru lmao..
Loro Piana is so mainstream now, the luxury of luxury fashion are some brands you have never heard of before who own 1 or 2 shops period, and don't have an online store anywhere.
i agree with that dad freaking out about the sneakers so much. if you really want sneakers that look old and dirty and worn then just buy sneakers and wear them until they're old and dirty and worn. or hell, just buy regular sneakers for a normal price and then throw them in the dirt until they look worn. i don't understand buying ripped jeans either personally. i've been wearing the same jeans for years and if i want my jeans to be ripped i just take a pair of scissors and start ripping them.
Balenciaga taps into anti fashion. I’m typically a fan of the aesthetic. It resembles some of the work Martin Margiela did decades ago..tho I’d say he did a better job. It’s def not new. The aesthetic of used items is just a shortcut to have the aesthetic but not dedicate the time. It’s tapping into the idea of your favorite pair of jeans or shoes that have been molded to your specific body after so many years. Id argue that you can have blind spots when you have so many people involved in something like a campaign. Especially if the structure is coming from the top. What I don’t think happened was, let’s step back and see if this makes sense. Lack of actually having kids or interacting with parents/kids is also another factor that I think might have happened.
It doesn't matter where they are made. It depends on artisans and quality inspection. My family and I have bought 2 kislux bags in the past 3 years and I'm sure you won't be disappointed!
Look, it get it. You might wanna stick it to the sale's person. Prove you can buy it. Why wouldn't you just look them dead in the eye, pull out your phone, and go, "You work on commission right?" then purchase it online without listing who sold it to you, and then say, "cheers."
This was a fantastic and well researched video. Great job. For the Dior case, it’s disgusting that these fashion houses are exploiting workers. But then you peel back the layers to see that it’s Chinese owned factories exploiting Chinese migrant workers. Rich Chinese have made it clear to the world that they don’t care about their fellow countrymen and are all too happy pimping out their labor for $1-$2/hour…if that. Just so they can buy houses in Vancouver and try to get into wealthy private schools in the US or countries in Europe. It’s disgusting and it’s pathetic and those people don’t care. So, yes, it’s the fashion houses and they should be punished. But it’s also the Chinese business people who are all too happy to supply these “luxury” houses with essentially slave labor…
Those Hermes sales associates had better be making some amazing commission on those "game" sales though. But fr, I've worked at a suit store where suits went for around $500 custom-made, with about $50 of materials. Also I can kinda get some stores only letting people in with an appointment, or if they're dressed like their clientele with the rise of retail theft, sure the stuff might not necessarily be *worth* what it's priced at but I'd be paranoia-level careful if I had that giant corporate pressure to keep up the luxury act.
Fuccinelli is the perfect example of what good humans do with success. I remember a bigone era where that's what you did with uber wealth, you built libraries, schools & museums which held your name as a legacy!
If I ever get rich I'm buying for my personal style and I'm finding small businesses to support for it or commissioning pieces to be made for me, pieces that I can pass down through generations. If I become famous I would do the same when I can I know many are under contract to be a brand representative and get paid for being walking billboards but, think of every time a celebrity has bought something from a small business like Megan thee Stallion buying cosplay wigs, Taylor Swift buying accessories, that one purchase being posted blesses that small business immensely. I would love to do that for some small indie brand rather than a big corporation. You would never catch me with a Birkin bag unless they paid me to own one since they're not that cute and the culture around them grosses me out so much when it's so opposite from what Jane Birkin was actually like and she came up with that bag idea with the designer! Jane Birkin seems like she was a cool person and I think most people who own Birkins now if they could meet her when she was younger especially when she carried that basket around would judge her and see her as lesser than themselves if they didn't know who she was. I would be embarrassed to be associated with people who put bags behind glass in their own homes. I can understand fashion historians doing that to preserve it but, what's the point of buying clothes you will never wear if not for preservation? Even if the resell value is immense they aren't going to do that if they can avoid it, that's how collectors are. Normally, I love collecting things and if it's not hurting anyone including you and your finances by all means collect shoes or bags or whatever just for the fun of it but it's the CULTURE around collectors(not wearers) of luxury fashion that gives me the ick since it seems less about the passion and love for fashion or those brands and more about the status symbol it brings. Edited Note: Also I HATE the way resellers operate and luxury fashion resellers are usually the worst which makes the culture around collecting luxury fashion even worse.
It truly hurts my heart to know how much these underpaid workers are being taken advantage of and devalued So the company can make an outrageous profit. They could absolutely afford to pay fair wages. The amount of inflation for the items is greedy on a whole new level of greediness. I hate it. I don't want anything from these fashion houses. If I want something truly luxury I will have it made for me. Fortunately I know an amazing seamstress who has done alterations on some of my clothes. She doesn't charge an arm and a leg, either. I've also dabbled in making some of my own clothes. I love the idea of having an artisan make something for me and get paid well for doing it, whether it be jewelry or otherwise. My favorite handbag I ever bought was made by someone in the Netherlands. I found her on Etsy and we got to collaborate on the material and design. She was amazing and the bag wasn't even that expensive!
This all ties back to the enshitification of everything these days. I am a big proponent of buying high quality, ethically produced items as it is better for the planet and for the back account long term. However it's borderline impossible to do so these days. Price seems to have zero correlation with quality, and even if you try to seek out small independent brands, you have to do a ton of due diligence since half of them are secretly drop shippers or whitelabelers. Even the second hand market is full of fakes and fast fashion. I don't know what the solution is, but it's incredibly frustrating! Then even when I find something I like (currently the one pair of running shoes that don't cause issues with my tempermental feet) the brand will inevitably discontinue or ruin it (said running shoes now have a horrible seam that rubs and they changed the fabric to one that is stiffer and doesn't breath).
one time me and my sister walked into a louis viton store in hawaii. we weren’t gonna buy anything it was just for fun. my sister didn’t have shoes on bcs we were on the beach so after a couple of minutes we got asked to leave. the guy working there (probably) wanted to be mean so he looked at my sister (who was in a dress) and called her sir😭
I take pictures of designer items as a side job, and I'm always kind of baffled by chanel. The bags seem high quality, but the other products are just not it. We had two pairs of identical chanel runners in once, both authenticated, and BOTH had the stitching off-centre from the matching printed aspect. So there was a printed logo motif, and a stitched logo motif, and they were a few millimeters off from eachother in a very unintentional looking way on both pairs. Really not showing quality craftsmanship at that price point.
The only product I bought from a luxury brand was a lipstick from Dior. I was soo disappointed only by that lipstick as it didn't stay on for more than 30 min... that I realized I don't ever need to earn so much money and work long hours just 'to afford' these things and making other people richer. I am so sorry for all the young girls trying to raise their money to buy that s*** 😢
Idk living in dc and where you see luxury brands everywhere those that can afford the price hikes and the games are still out there buying luxury goods. If anything they like the fact that less rich people aren’t anymore because then it makes their products feel exclusive. As long as these brands have that target customer all over the world (+ rise of Asian luxury consumption) they’ll be fine
The most popular of the designer DTC products are almost always so ugly to me 😭. Like it just looks tacky, I think part of the reason it’s so easy to knock off is because it already looks like one to begin with.
Really enjoyed that video!!! In fact I was going to start taking my ADHD pills this week for the first time but after watching this video it made me realise that my ADHD is my best friend and I never want to be anyone that is neurotypical and fit in as bad as the people in your video do. Thank you baby girl T nuff love. 😘
ADHD medication won’t make you neurotypical or erase your ADHD. They won’t give you a desire to fit in or change your personality. If the meds work for you they’ll just make certain parts of your life easier. You’ll still be you, you’ll just keep track of time better and do your work faster and whatnot.
@@squid3946 thank you squid. Yeah I know I was just so taken aback by how this video exposed how really lonely and desperate most people are to fit in. 😘
Girl huh???? Medication will take away your inability to pay attention, which is a huge boon to being a functioning member of society. Take your drugs.
Just wanna say, these "luxury" items are still made by hand. Just by someone who is underpaid and not given enough training and time to produce these items in a proper quality. I know that the video goes into the exploitation of workers, but it find the wording in the beginning still a bit off. Otherwise thank you for the video. More people need to hear about this.
I would be like a little kid in this place. So much fabulousness! You looked like you were having a lot of fun there, Jesus. I hope you got the small Dior wicker bag. It was so cute. You're right, too. MOMCOCO is handbag heaven.
When I hear luxury I hear "can pass down to your kids as an inheritance", "need to buy insurance on it just in case fire damage, flood, etc". Doesn't fall apart as soon as you get it or just a few months after.
on the topic of replicas, I've live in Turkey all my life until 2 months ago where you see fake designer in almost every corner. Not even proper stores, they sell them in stalls at farmer's market or on a piece of cloth on the streets. I was in the need of a handbag yet had no money since I was in school and didn't want to burden my parents with an expensive one, so I got a style that I liked from a stall which was a Prada replica. The og bag is around 79-84K Turkish Liras while mine was around 150-250 Turkish liras. It looked identical and whenever I told someone that it was a replica, people seemed to be in shock and go "I could never tell". I have family who lives abroad and they weren't so familiar with the said replicas. I complimented one of their bags (bc it was a really nice bag) and she went "well, you have a Prada. its nothing compared to that" in a joking manner and she was surprised when I told her that it was a knock-off. It's all about social currency rather than the material value of the item.
The bad costumer service DO WORK. Silly people give them money instead of getting the heck out of the stores and going somewhere else. I've walked out of stores for less SO people need to take responsibility for the shit ya'll willing to take from a luxury store. Oprah wanna go back and forth. That asian dude buying that purse after the attitude. I would verbaly drag them and take my money to another store
I make bags and other accessories by hand. It takes a lot of time and skill. But friends and family would think I’m too expensive selling a leather bag or crochet hat but will buy some crap designer item for 5times the price.
35:53 the grime of life, lived in, and abandoned is the reality of where luxury almost always ends up...discarded. In fashion today, new clean smell (no ownership) and how everything looks the same, until it's used, lived in, worn. Beauty is many things to many people and that lady's art education? She should of learned about this her 1st year. This is where art and fashion blur the lines, push them, and reshape the "i would never wear that" to "i can't believe i didn't own this sooner"
I briefly worked at Louis Vuitton on Sloane Street in London, but quit after a few weeks. The amount of ABUSE that I endured from some coworkers and managers was incredible. Also, we had to “screen” Asian customers, for what they call “grey market” customers; that is, Asian customers buying the same item in different LV locations, often paying cash, and selling it for double the cost in places like China. So racial profiling was a huge part of the sales associate position. Horrible company to work for. 👎🏼
I am an amateur perfumer and can say most perfumes aren’t as marked up as other luxury items. Natural ingredients are incredibly expensive.,however be mindful of fragrance concentrations. If you are paying over 80 bucks for an Eau Fraiche, Toliette, or cologne concentration (I am looking at you Replica) you are being robbed, lol.
They got excessively greedy and arrogant after covid. Their sales artificially boomed because of the stimmy money. LVMH and Kering thought their industry was recession proof. They raised their prices to fuck all and started outsourcing to foreign manufacturers in China and Thailand. You're gonna make me pay a premium price for a premium European brand and your sneakers are made in China? Conglomerate luxury is so gross and artificial. There's nothing scarce about these products, you can order almost anything you want from any LVMH or Kering brand. This is why so many people are spending hundreds on vintage tees, because they're ACTUALLY limited.
The founders of these fashion houses, and the folks who truly cared about real luxury, have died a long time ago. Now it is just corporate greed coasting on the reputations build decades ago.
There are a few good fashion houses out there but they’re not well known, unfortunately
@@Itsbabygirlt if I was super wealthy that’s the brands I would look to, not what the famous houses sell because it’s apparent that what they’re selling to the general population has declined in the quality. Why waste thousands of dollars on something that isn’t truly luxury (if that’s what is being advertised)
Those underground numbers aren't cheap.
Love this video, thank you for including the prices I find a lot of videos like this don’t include the prices which is annoying when you are planning a trip. Can’t wait to go there again, there are so many great things in this video *hotdups*
I use my *jklux* as a work bag and have had no issues at all. It’s a comfortable bag, fits a good amount and hadn’t lost its shape. With that being said, I also take care of all my bags and don’t carry a water bottle, pens, keys or anything that can damage the interior.
So... They treat their customers like shit, their products are crap, people are having more and more trouble paying for basic needs so arent buying unnecessary items... Im not surprised these brands are struggling.
These brands will bounce back when people get more flexibility in their spending!
I mean that's how they keep the middle class customers on edge. By belittling you they instill insecurities and thus gives you the urge to buy their stuffs to prove yourself.
I love the *HOTDUPS* bag, the fabric is nice, the gold trim adds to the beauty, and I have received a few compliments when I go to church.
Hahaha I love that sign in the background, and that pretty candle holder - curious what you were burning (is my 'candle addict' showing lol?!) Such a helpful video, I'm awful at knowing the differences and go thrifting a lot, so I'm always nervous to pick up *HOTDUPS* , jackets, so many others things - ugh! You are always so knowledgeable about these luxury brands. You can definitely notice the high quality stitching.
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated.
Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature.
I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling.
I work in luxury knitwear, True luxury to me means the best materials, made to measure/bespoke fitting in tailoring, exclusivity for a handful of clients. The mainstream houses don’t offer that and even their „image“ has vanished with production conditions exposed. So we still exist but don’t need to advertise 🙂
That’s amazing and sounds like true luxury, would you mind sharing the brand?
Best materials, made to measure and exclusivity is what they sell in haute couture not pret a porter
@@Itsbabygirlt it‘s an haute couture knittery in Hamburg, Germany working for all well known brands (Hermès, Loro Piana, Chanel, Etc.) as well as private clients. Showing a little bit on my Channel 😎
yesss I know a girl how does handbags really beautiful but too expensive for me I kept contact with her and I told her when I'll finish my studies and become a CPA I'll come back and buy your bags I know the quality will be worth it and I love her design 1000X more then those ''luxury'' brands!
Los bolsos en *jklux* combinan con todo. ?Muchos elogios! ?Gran pieza para agregar a tu colección!
We really need to push for supply chain transparency and actual legislation that holds brands at EVERY level accountable for what's going on in their factories. Everyone from Shein to Dior is getting away with literal human rights violations and it's 2024 and we should be doing better. Great video!
You’re right. Modern day slavery is happening and it’s supported when those who have the power to do things better still uphold systems that trample on peoples basic human rights
(Thanks for watching 😊)
For a long time, as Chanel prices have risen, I no longer thought I could afford it. I think I would be happy to have a *HOTDUPS* as a travel bag that I don't have to take care of. By the way, I'm sure no one would have a hard time telling the difference. Thanks for the comparison.
I don't understand people who buy their bags on chinese websites, terrible. With *HOTDUPS* you will be on another fashion level.
Hi! Two creators I’ve been following in recent months have unwrapped LV Popincourt bags (Tiana Peri and Alyssa from The Gal’s Guide), but their bags are East/West silhouettes. I can’t remember the price, but they both feel like great buys. For a vintage bag, it’s pretty on trend, and I’d love to own an exact *hotdups* .
Yes the color of the *hotdups* is beautiful and it is a great decision, maybe one day they will add feet and straps. It would be nice to have a bigger bag during the colder months when we have to store gloves, beanies, scarves, etc…
It's insane that you're paying mostly for the ads when buying luxury goods
AND then you become yourself the ad...😅
It’s the nature of luxury, you’re also paying for the luxury stores
Love *jklux* the way you show it! You really focus on showing off the bag. I don't think any other UA-camr can show off bags in as much detail as you.
Someone at Dior really upset the Italian government..... and so the government decided to take them out. Because THEY ALL do this. Dior is not an exception. I will wager that Chanel is made in even worse conditions and even less valuable.
All of them should be transparent about their manufacturing process
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated.
Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature.
I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling
If you can wear a high quality *hotdups* for $200-500 then why not. I am glad to hear that rich people do that because if I was a billionaire or had $500 million in the bank account I would spend the money on the authentic ones. That will never happen.
This👍
Ilia kvalito ne estas malsupera al tiuj grandaj luksaj varoj. La fortikeco kaj atento al detaloj rivalas kun la originalaj dezajnistsakoj kaj mi ne povas kredi kiom mi ?paris. ?i estas la perfekta akcesora?o por iu ajn moda knabino! Mi certas, ke mi rea?etos iujn aliajn stilojn kaj kolorojn *jklux*
$700 for costume jewelry is WILD. I have a 14k gold nameplate necklace that only cost $500.
Yeah, at that point you might as well get it custom made
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated.
Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature.
I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling.
I’ve gone to Dubai and purchased a 22k bracelet for about 1200.00. Ain’t no way. I would ever buy costume jewelry over 100.00
Yeah i was looking at Tiffany jewelry and a piece of plated cross necklace was 700 bucks same as somethin that wouldbe 30 to 40 bucks anywhere else
Me remembering nearly all the bags from the jag collection in *jklux* other apartment on the dimond tray.. I think i watched that video like 40 times. Purse collection goals
I don’t understand the Hermes game. To spend 10k-20K at least to be on the wait list, then they call you in for some ugly and hard to sell bags that you don’t want and you can’t refuse otherwise you will need to spend more to be called in for another bag. Even you got the opportunity to buy a bag, you still need to spend usually the same amount or 1.5 times of the bag’s price on other merchandise to finally own the bag.
The whole point of the game is to not understand it but play it anyways while still spending thousands at their store
It makes sense. To be chosen is to be special. It is the exclusivity that matters. It is all psychology.
Jeffree Star, behind his vault door wardrobe has hundreds of Birkins, and the most expensive he has/had was 500k. Half of a million pounds let that sink in. Even if I won the lottery or Euromillions or even made significant money some other way, no way would I spend it on handbags of that cost. Absolutely no way. I would like to make garments and accessories that are made to last like they used to be. I listen to my 80+ year old Nana how things break and don’t last and how things used to be made to last years ago. I have 1920’s furs and 1960’s dresses still in perfect condition. I would never charge the amount that these designer brands charge. I would like to design and manufacture my items in the UK at a reasonable price, but, is it worth it anymore? I want as many people to comment and give opinions as possible. “Luxury” fashion in general I believe is an overpriced scam paying for the name where the quality that once existed is no longer.
One of my BEST experiences ever was in a Chanel store in Monaco. This was in 2018 so maybe things have changed, but I was around 17, my sister 20, and we thought “fuck it, why shouldn’t we walk into the store?” We are not wealthy. We did not look the part and were clearly kids. The door was locked, they had to open them for you from the inside. We not only got let in, a salesperson offered us champagne or juice right away, he chatted with us, took us upstaris and let us try on jewellery worth 100.000 euros, with hundreds of real diamonds in it, he let us take photos, left us ALONE with the jewellery, he was the nicest person ever, talked to us about Coco Chanel, shared things about himself, gave us his business card, and let us take our time. When it came to leaving, my sister was so amazed and grateful, she wanted to buy a coffee table chanel book we found on one of the tables. It had a price printed on the back, 25 euros or something - she wanted to buy it to remember this experience. When she expressed this, our salesman did not let us buy it, he gave it to us for free, and then led us out of the store through the clothing section of the store so we can windowshop some more. Tom, I do not know your last name, but you have made our summer vacation, our year, and my idea of great customer experience forever.
P.S. The content of the video is baffling, i just wanted to share a fond memory
....what?!? That's crazy
Thanks such a good experience and memory, shoutout to Tom from the Chanel store in Monaco!
The part on jewelry is spot on !! I'm from a ancien noble french family, and it's a tradition (if you ask for it though) in my family that you get for your 18 or 20th anniversary a signet ring. I was scared it will be to pricey when i looked at handmade high jewelry. But i had an appointment with the last signet ring maker in Paris and the total price was only 1900 euro. 500 euro for the gold and 1400 for the engraving ( which was very difficult to make on my ring since my plate and my hand are particularly tinny). We also saw before an jewelry shop for another expertise and they told us it will cost 8000 euro. They were completely inflating the price. So we settled with the signet maker and it was so worth it. He also explained to me and my father how jewelry makers inflamed the prices.
And honestly, as a french i think the blame is on the gouvernment for delocalization of fabrics houses and the strategy of lvhm and Arnault. He destroyed the french luxury houses that he'd buy
They treat their customers like trash because it makes them buy more things.
If you tell someone that they can’t afford something in your store, it makes that person want to prove you wrong. So they spend a lot of money trying to show you that they are worthy.
Yeah, it’s like reverse psychology….and it actually works
And its easy to use this method on people that are already buying items for the sheer purpose of proving to the world that they have money. This tactic would never work on someone who just wants a quality product.
@@Itsbabygirlt
it works on status seeking people, on normal people it's degrading
My sister who doesnt have a job, income stream or a place to live outside our parents place is obsessed with luxury fashion, still living with the belief that the stuff she likes today is to the same standard as 150 years ago. She recieved a Gucci dress for her 18th birthday from our folks and will die on the hill that anything less than that will fall apart or not pass into next season. I buy outfits from little independat marketeers abd second chance stores/op shops in my city which she constantly criticises as "fast fashion" or "built to burn". It absolutely annoys the hell out of me, especially considering i can't convince her that she is a sucker for everything she claims i've fallen for.
Idk I guess to her that’s just what she likes, everyone’s fashion taste is different type shit
14:22 Temporary tattoos and stickers? Who was the intended target demo for that calender??? 9 year old kids?😂😂
It seems like it 😂
You pay mostly for Bernard Arnault's huge salary and the shareholders.
Can’t forget about the shareholders!
FYI, those luxury brands are so mediocre overrated.
Even Oud/Agarwood the world's most expensive wood they have in their perfumes are so fake because the real one like mine on my channel isn't affordable for them because it's true rare to fin in the wild nature.
I contacted them all since 2018 where I started to realize their tricks they're selling
You are also paying and funding the free gifts and trips when luxury brands sponsor the “influencers” while the quality and services decline.
Basically
I grew up middle class, and when I became an adult, I made quite a bit of money. And then I got divorced and lost almost everything. I was poor for quite a while. And I met my new husband, and he has made a lot of money in his life. at this point, I have learned that no matter how much fancy stuff you buy, it won't fill the hole. It won't make you happy long-term.
This is why I go to the Goodwill's and Salvation Army's near fancy neighborhoods in my area and I get all of this stuff for under $10. ❤❤
And yet, you seem very focused on money.
The entire 50 minutes video is about money. You seem lost. Or just wanted to shame a someone. Did the divorce mention sting you a bit? lmao
@ what? What are you talking about
🐑 ... there's a saying in my country: "sheeps are for shearing"
Are you from eastern Europe 😂 because same 😂😂
And what does that mean?
Who are the sheep in this case?
@@Itsbabygirlt the consumers
@@Itsbabygirlt it literally means fools are for swindling
These big fashion houses- which were a long time ago based on art and high quality- are now major corporations which are following profits above all else. They are driven by greed: they raise prices to the maximum while reducing quality to the minimum, and invest heavily in mass psychological manipulation to convince folks to buy their overpriced products.
I come from a country where the gem and jewellery industry has been thriving for over a thousand years, so I grew up around beautiful gem and gold jewellery pieces that are high quality too. Just last week, a friend showed me her Van Cleef bracelet, and I was lowkey angry at the price tag?! The thing is , I've found the same design, with pure gold, in our own country for so much less. It just pissed me off that these big "designer" brands get away with charging so much when our local artisans offer less value for real quality. (We're Srilankan btw)
I am Indian and want to visit Sri Lanka some day. It is so beautiful and has rich history and culture. Sending love from USA ❤
Sri Lanka is a beautiful country with beautiful people. I have read a lot about tea from your country. I love it ❤
Van Cleef is the ugliest jewellery I have ever set eyes upon. Secondhand costume jewellery from eBay is so much prettier than van Cleef, and even the real solid gold and diamond ones are more affordable.
Recently I’ve realized that the highest quality in clothing and service can come from a small business rather than a luxury brand. Small businesses are so ambitious, and I feel that reaching the top has made luxury brands loose a sense of what they were when they all started out, in both quality and service.
90-95% of the cost of the "luxury" products goes towards huge marking budgets (the biggest item because the logo is all important), fancy stores, management and big profits. Only a small fraction of the final price actually goes towards making the actual item. These brands are all about hype...and little else.
Sadly, true
Go to the small business designers. Good quality and will last. Not well known but amazing quality that what I look for. O and usually it’s 1/2 the price of luxury brands.
The unknown luxury brands definitely give you a different customer service experience and often times more quality for your buck
Could you please share some of your favourite small brands ? 🙏
Commenting for visibility, this deserves more views!!
Thanks so much ❤️
I can’t be the only one that feels that Birkin bags are neither classy nor luxurious anymore? I feel like the Hermes games have the opposite effect on exclusivity. Every influencer and their mom is frothing at the mouth to get into the birkin club, so much so that they’ll take out loans to get the ugliest, most humiliating bags. Birkins aren’t a symbol of class and wealth anymore, but of middle class desperation. You’d think a brand that presents itself as the pillar of craftsmanship and luxury, would want customers that had the self-respect to walk away from the disrespect of getting purposely offered ugly items
Birkin bags has always been the desperation for middle class ever since the influencers and other people boost its popularity, even before social media days.
Never trust luxury brands taken and funded by LVMH after their origin creators has passed or retired. The quality has gone down a lot as well.
The 90s were when the industry was starting to go downhill, and then when Gianni died, so did all of those big fashion houses.
this, or they get replicas
Majority of influencers have fake bags anyway, they’re not easy to get in shops so there’s no way each of the, have the original black or brown bag, the most popular colours!
Birkin. What a joke. Laughed all the way to the bank
I think one of the worst things to happen to the fashion industry (and I'm semi-generalizing here) is the value of profit over art. It's true what you said in the intro, that "luxury fashion" started off as custom creations for the few high-society, rich people who could buy them. That's what French couture was back then. But because fashion is not just art, but also practical, clothing has to be practical and that means the reality of producing garments is that it will ALWAYS be tied with capitalism. We can't untangle it from capitalism because realistically, the only way for a brand to have longevity is through commercial success and what this leads to is these giant groups buying these brands and consolidating them into one giant umbrella (ex: LVMH, Kering) and not understanding that the success of a fashion brand DOES still rely on the quality. They want numbers and they want them quick and that's just not how it works. If the price of "luxury goods" is going to be what it is going to be, every step of creation of the garment/accessory/product should reflect that price point as well.
Did not know about the Hermes Game and that's just bonkers. That's on a different level of being rich just because of the amount of money you have to spend, but it is honestly kind of ingenious. Hermes has always been perceived as the luxury of luxury in handbags and the entire experience reflects that. About the sales associates though, I always wonder if it's intentional to treat people that way or if the employees somehow think they're above others?? Very strange.
Balenciaga has lost the plot. It used to be about performance art that still managed to feel like practical clothing and about shock value of going against traditional fashion rules and mores. But the continued use of shock value for everything from campaigns to the runway has become not only stale, but almost annoying. Idk about their numbers but I honestly can't imagine that they've been doing well lately. Their consumer base isn't like other brands, so I have a hard time imagining who they sell to or think they're marketing to and who actually buys their products. Seems like the only way they keep relevancy and maybe their numbers up as well is by making sure people are talking about them, whether in good or bad light.
I had never heard of Cucinelli and it makes me think of something ironic. Back then, when all the brands we know today like Chanel, Dior, LV, etc were starting off it really was about the passion to want to make money yes, but also to produce a luxury product that felt worth the price and that was NOT marketed to the layman, but to the rich and high society individuals. And now? There are outlets of all the big brands, you can walk into a department store and see these brands, you can walk into a mall and buy one, even in lower-middle class to middle class areas, it is normal to see an LV bag here, a Dior bag there, an MK bag on a working class women. These brands that paint themselves as being oh so luxurious and coveted are pedestrian brands. Because it is entirely true that the rich people who are really truly rich are not buying these brands, they are buying from labels we will likely never hear of. But its funny how when they also have the opportunity to spend their unethical money ethically, they still don't.
Sorry for the long comment, fashion is my favorite thing in the world and I'm very happy to see this type of video from you. It's funny timing, I very recently decided on a career change into the fashion industry and here comes this video lol. I do want to say though, one brand I really like is Loewe. I haven't done an insane amount of research on them, so I could be wrong but they do seem to have a genuine focus on craftsmanship, particularly when it comes to their accessories.
@@sansonaxy_4974 there was a time where materials were very hard to come by. So even a peasants had to make their own clothes with any fabric they could get their hands on. Rich people could afford other people to make their clothes and that became couture. However the peasants couldn’t just buy new clothes so they had to alter and take really good care of the clothes they did have. Vs today where clothes have become disposable. Oh there’s a hole in the shirt just order one online for $5. The value of clothing to a person is very diminished.
As far as Balenciaga doing well, it seems they’ve gained an Asian audience. They’re doing well money wise considering they just rehired Demna to stay as creative director. If they were hurting money wise I’m pretty sure the board would have fired Demna and gotten someone new especially after the scandals.
So many things have lost their value because profit/attention was put over art, it’s a grim reality. But I understand why some do that, they don’t get attention without doing something crazy! Also don’t apologize for the long comment, I read the whole thing 😊 and goodluck in your pursuit of a career in fashion, it’s never too late to start and the sky’s the limit!
Industries in Socialist countries also want profit. The difference is greed. Instead of workers owning shares, its usually just whatever new CEO and managers trying to earn as many bonuses on earning profits as they can. In a good economy, they would be creative and find a good marketing strategy. But the easiest way is to cut costs. And every company is doing it. If they dont increase sales, they dont earn bonuses. Thats whynyou see companies earning more and more while their employees income and benefits stagnate and dont keep up with inflation, work load increases, and may even lose benefits.
What a great comment! I read the whole thing. I like Loewe too! Their own page has a lengthy histoire to read, they have their own leather factory and school in Madrid, very interesting. I am eyeing a Loewe bag on Vestiaire - 2nd hand, so even better!
Very good journalism about luxury market.
Thank you Vonnie 😊
The middle class and "poor" buy luxury brands.
The woman who showed her defective Chanel bag in the intro?
Notice she had to mention she had opened the bag to remove her keys for the valet 🤣
If that were her actual life she would have just said she opened her bag.
Period.
She wouldn't have the need to make sure everyone knew she was dealing with a valet
Maybe using valet is so normal to her that she said it without any hesitation or deeper meaning
@@Itsbabygirlt If it was so normal she probably would have said she just got her keys out of her bag 😭
@@Itsbabygirlt Its extra information. You dont say you removed your keys to open the car or open your house. You just remove them.
Bernard Arnault did not become the riches person in the world because he was pricing his products fairly.
I don’t think luxury follows the concept of ‘fair pricing’
My ex boyfriend works in fabrication of cosmetics in France, with customer brands named in this video, so he told me that the brands buy raw materials deliberately in huge quantities, because it is cheaper than small amounts, even knowing that they won’t use the whole quantity, they send it to this factory and then tell them to get rid of the rest of the material, he told me the quantity being destroyed is scandalous, but it is cheaper for the brand than any other option.
What?! That’s so wasteful
You are good at this. Took me forever to watch this but I did it. I dislike what I call glamour luxury but do spend my dollars on activewear (Lululemon) and outdoor clothes (Patagonia/ arcteryx) for example. Love your work can't wait for the next!
Thank you, I really appreciate it ❤️
In Asia, there are many smaller high quality brands, that look as good or better and are outstanding quality moree than the "luxury brands." I use my stuff, I want it to look good, I don't care about a label, I care about it being durable and functional.
Great point!
I wanted to buy a 18kt gold Cartier ring because I thought it would hold the value more than a luxury handbag that goes out of style. The ring cost 1.300€ but if I wanted to sell it for its gold value I would only get 250-280€. I decided to not buy it and buy gold from a local jeweller. The price-value was much more balanced.
Buying vintage premium/luxury is so much better. You don't support new production for unethical conglomerates like LVMH, or support low-pay, poor quality products. There are some exceptions like Chloe's move to become a B-corp which seems to still be producing high-quality goods. But largely, the craftsmanship is, overall, in the toilet and the quality even from 20 years ago is leagues better. Plus you get a lower price for better quality (ex. old Coach styles, YSL, Gucci etc are seriously so, so, so much better). The same goes for jewelry. The new Cartier Trinity rings look and feel like hot garbage but the old ones weigh more, and look expensive as f**k.
Vintage can be a good option, because of the craftsmanship that was in older pieces. Plus, it’s a win-win when you can find high-quality items at lower prices
I like to find small business seamstresses and order basic shirts & skirts. They're not target or walmart cheap, but they're not hundreds or thousands of dollars either. They *are* high quality regardless, and the money goes to a person or a small team of people.
The LUXURY is in the person wearing it. A person has the ability to make any GOOD a LUXURY good
OKAYY, this is a WORD!
The quality of this video is really good!! Thank you for making this I didn't know some of the information that you said and I'm shocked to hear some of them especially the hand embroidery part
Thank you 😊 really appreciate it ❤️
I have seen your videos come up in the past, but this is the first one I think I've watched completely and WOW! You have done an absolutely stellar job, from research, to sources, to examples, to analysis. Fantastic work, you've definitely earned a fan and a subscriber. Looking forward to looking through your backlog of videos, and will keep an eye out for more of your work in the future.
Thank you so much for watching and I’m so glad to have earned your support ❤️
non-related to the topic but this video made me subscribe to you omg! I love your way of executing the topic, it's both for those into fashion and those who doesn't know much about it. it's between subjective and objective n I loved it. gonna binge ur channel now
You have quickly become one of my favorite creators! Your content is always informative, relevant and thoughtful. Thank you for all of your hard work! 🤗
I appreciate this so much! Thank you for your kind words ❤️ glad to have you here!
First off, let’s start with a $7000 Chanel bag. I don’t care how rich I am I would never.
Good afternoon: Ummm I'm the same. Half of the designers products are worthless & fake. But claim to be real & worthy. You might look beautiful & lovely but is it actually worth it...?? And why..??
Never say never lol
Max. 500€/£/$. And I'm passionate about bags, but 1000 is just too much. 500.
Very informative and intelligent apprising of the fashion industry. Thank you so much and well done. Hands down beat the usual UA-camrs ie. Cassie Thorpe etc with your reporting and research. I’m going to subscribe and hope a lot of others interested in this field do so too. You deserve your place here . ❤
Thanks so much for the kind words! Appreciate it ❤️
3:37 the psychology of this man makes me so sad
True
same
Really insightful video, deserves more views 👏
I appreciate that! Thanks for watching ❤️
Just wanted to express gratitude towards your efforts in providing detailed information in this video! I very much enjoyed being a part of your audience!
Thank you so much. I really appreciate your comment, It means a lot and thank you for being here ❤️
The rich buy luxury fashion, just not the ones plastered with logos. Were talking 7000 dollars Loro Piana cashmere sweaters without a label, not a Guccibelt that the "poors" are able to save up money for.
This isn’t always true either. I’m sure there’s rich people who like logo items or even dupes. Like the logo but not the prices tag so they spend money on making more money. 🤔
The rich ain’t buying loro piana, only idiots are. Loro piana’s quality isnt the best either and they were caught not paying their workers in Peru lmao..
Neither of you are addressing the issue here: quality(lack of), and customer service ( lack of)
"The poors"
🤨🤨🤨
Loro Piana is so mainstream now, the luxury of luxury fashion are some brands you have never heard of before who own 1 or 2 shops period, and don't have an online store anywhere.
Loveee this topic 🥰🥰 such a good video
Glad you liked it! ❤️
This was soo good!!
Thank you 🫶😊
This video is excellent. You put a ton of work into this and it shows. Awesome job!
Thank you ❤️
i agree with that dad freaking out about the sneakers so much. if you really want sneakers that look old and dirty and worn then just buy sneakers and wear them until they're old and dirty and worn. or hell, just buy regular sneakers for a normal price and then throw them in the dirt until they look worn. i don't understand buying ripped jeans either personally. i've been wearing the same jeans for years and if i want my jeans to be ripped i just take a pair of scissors and start ripping them.
Balenciaga taps into anti fashion. I’m typically a fan of the aesthetic. It resembles some of the work Martin Margiela did decades ago..tho I’d say he did a better job. It’s def not new.
The aesthetic of used items is just a shortcut to have the aesthetic but not dedicate the time. It’s tapping into the idea of your favorite pair of jeans or shoes that have been molded to your specific body after so many years.
Id argue that you can have blind spots when you have so many people involved in something like a campaign. Especially if the structure is coming from the top. What I don’t think happened was, let’s step back and see if this makes sense. Lack of actually having kids or interacting with parents/kids is also another factor that I think might have happened.
nah. it's obviously a channel for money laundering.
Great video!
They have to save as much money as possible in production in order to maximize the profits to their shareholders.
Right, and to also uphold the image of luxury and wealth
This is such a good and well researched video 👏👏
Thanks so much 😊🫶
It doesn't matter where they are made. It depends on artisans and quality inspection. My family and I have bought 2 kislux bags in the past 3 years and I'm sure you won't be disappointed!
Look, it get it. You might wanna stick it to the sale's person. Prove you can buy it. Why wouldn't you just look them dead in the eye, pull out your phone, and go, "You work on commission right?" then purchase it online without listing who sold it to you, and then say, "cheers."
This was a very well researched video! Thank you!
Thank you for watching ❤️
This was a fantastic and well researched video. Great job. For the Dior case, it’s disgusting that these fashion houses are exploiting workers. But then you peel back the layers to see that it’s Chinese owned factories exploiting Chinese migrant workers. Rich Chinese have made it clear to the world that they don’t care about their fellow countrymen and are all too happy pimping out their labor for $1-$2/hour…if that. Just so they can buy houses in Vancouver and try to get into wealthy private schools in the US or countries in Europe. It’s disgusting and it’s pathetic and those people don’t care. So, yes, it’s the fashion houses and they should be punished. But it’s also the Chinese business people who are all too happy to supply these “luxury” houses with essentially slave labor…
Chanel making No.5 its whole personality smh
😂 can’t let the people forget
Those Hermes sales associates had better be making some amazing commission on those "game" sales though. But fr, I've worked at a suit store where suits went for around $500 custom-made, with about $50 of materials. Also I can kinda get some stores only letting people in with an appointment, or if they're dressed like their clientele with the rise of retail theft, sure the stuff might not necessarily be *worth* what it's priced at but I'd be paranoia-level careful if I had that giant corporate pressure to keep up the luxury act.
This is why I just wait for shit to come to Marshalls. That way if it turns out to be cheap least I paid cheap 🤷🏾♀️
Marshall’s has some good finds
Loved the video!
Glad you enjoyed it, Aaliyah 😊❤️
This content was done very well!!!!!! Luxury is changing?🤔
Thanks!!!!!! It just might be!
I just want some good quality long lasting items , like I wish my boots to survive more than a winter before cracking , they were expensive too
Fuccinelli is the perfect example of what good humans do with success. I remember a bigone era where that's what you did with uber wealth, you built libraries, schools & museums which held your name as a legacy!
28:10 I believe this was a marketing campaign from the beginning, including when she went to Chanel in street clothing. Very clever.
I thought so at first but they never publicly acknowledged her and never officially collaborated with her. The whole thing seems organic
so well made, subscribed
thank you! 😊
This is SUCH a great question.
THANKS
It's not luxury; its overpriced!
The thing is, it has to be overpriced to be seen as luxury!
If I ever get rich I'm buying for my personal style and I'm finding small businesses to support for it or commissioning pieces to be made for me, pieces that I can pass down through generations. If I become famous I would do the same when I can I know many are under contract to be a brand representative and get paid for being walking billboards but, think of every time a celebrity has bought something from a small business like Megan thee Stallion buying cosplay wigs, Taylor Swift buying accessories, that one purchase being posted blesses that small business immensely. I would love to do that for some small indie brand rather than a big corporation. You would never catch me with a Birkin bag unless they paid me to own one since they're not that cute and the culture around them grosses me out so much when it's so opposite from what Jane Birkin was actually like and she came up with that bag idea with the designer! Jane Birkin seems like she was a cool person and I think most people who own Birkins now if they could meet her when she was younger especially when she carried that basket around would judge her and see her as lesser than themselves if they didn't know who she was.
I would be embarrassed to be associated with people who put bags behind glass in their own homes. I can understand fashion historians doing that to preserve it but, what's the point of buying clothes you will never wear if not for preservation? Even if the resell value is immense they aren't going to do that if they can avoid it, that's how collectors are. Normally, I love collecting things and if it's not hurting anyone including you and your finances by all means collect shoes or bags or whatever just for the fun of it but it's the CULTURE around collectors(not wearers) of luxury fashion that gives me the ick since it seems less about the passion and love for fashion or those brands and more about the status symbol it brings.
Edited Note: Also I HATE the way resellers operate and luxury fashion resellers are usually the worst which makes the culture around collecting luxury fashion even worse.
It truly hurts my heart to know how much these underpaid workers are being taken advantage of and devalued So the company can make an outrageous profit. They could absolutely afford to pay fair wages. The amount of inflation for the items is greedy on a whole new level of greediness. I hate it. I don't want anything from these fashion houses. If I want something truly luxury I will have it made for me. Fortunately I know an amazing seamstress who has done alterations on some of my clothes. She doesn't charge an arm and a leg, either. I've also dabbled in making some of my own clothes. I love the idea of having an artisan make something for me and get paid well for doing it, whether it be jewelry or otherwise. My favorite handbag I ever bought was made by someone in the Netherlands. I found her on Etsy and we got to collaborate on the material and design. She was amazing and the bag wasn't even that expensive!
Really good video. Thankyou! Best of wishes
thank you, Alejandro! Wishing you the best as well 🥰
This all ties back to the enshitification of everything these days. I am a big proponent of buying high quality, ethically produced items as it is better for the planet and for the back account long term. However it's borderline impossible to do so these days. Price seems to have zero correlation with quality, and even if you try to seek out small independent brands, you have to do a ton of due diligence since half of them are secretly drop shippers or whitelabelers. Even the second hand market is full of fakes and fast fashion. I don't know what the solution is, but it's incredibly frustrating! Then even when I find something I like (currently the one pair of running shoes that don't cause issues with my tempermental feet) the brand will inevitably discontinue or ruin it (said running shoes now have a horrible seam that rubs and they changed the fabric to one that is stiffer and doesn't breath).
one time me and my sister walked into a louis viton store in hawaii. we weren’t gonna buy anything it was just for fun. my sister didn’t have shoes on bcs we were on the beach so after a couple of minutes we got asked to leave. the guy working there (probably) wanted to be mean so he looked at my sister (who was in a dress) and called her sir😭
Lmao
But ya a shoeless patron is a hard NO
Calling her sir was just foul
I take pictures of designer items as a side job, and I'm always kind of baffled by chanel. The bags seem high quality, but the other products are just not it. We had two pairs of identical chanel runners in once, both authenticated, and BOTH had the stitching off-centre from the matching printed aspect. So there was a printed logo motif, and a stitched logo motif, and they were a few millimeters off from eachother in a very unintentional looking way on both pairs. Really not showing quality craftsmanship at that price point.
Wow that’s so bad
@@Itsbabygirlt yeah I actually asked my client if she could guarantee they were real because it seemed like such a cheap mistake!
That just shows how despite the quality falling, there’s no effort to make improvements because there’s still a large customer base willing to buy it
The only product I bought from a luxury brand was a lipstick from Dior. I was soo disappointed only by that lipstick as it didn't stay on for more than 30 min... that I realized I don't ever need to earn so much money and work long hours just 'to afford' these things and making other people richer.
I am so sorry for all the young girls trying to raise their money to buy that s*** 😢
It’s good that you’ve realized you don’t need to chase after those brands, buy what you like and within your budget
Oh my the first Hermes SA whipping the bag out of the dustbag fumbling and tumbling it absolutely terrible
This is why you should buy products with quality and not luxury.
Idk living in dc and where you see luxury brands everywhere those that can afford the price hikes and the games are still out there buying luxury goods. If anything they like the fact that less rich people aren’t anymore because then it makes their products feel exclusive. As long as these brands have that target customer all over the world (+ rise of Asian luxury consumption) they’ll be fine
true, as long as there’s demand, they’ll keep pushing those high prices!
The most popular of the designer DTC products are almost always so ugly to me 😭. Like it just looks tacky, I think part of the reason it’s so easy to knock off is because it already looks like one to begin with.
Really enjoyed that video!!! In fact I was going to start taking my ADHD pills this week for the first time but after watching this video it made me realise that my ADHD is my best friend and I never want to be anyone that is neurotypical and fit in as bad as the people in your video do. Thank you baby girl T nuff love. 😘
ADHD medication won’t make you neurotypical or erase your ADHD. They won’t give you a desire to fit in or change your personality. If the meds work for you they’ll just make certain parts of your life easier. You’ll still be you, you’ll just keep track of time better and do your work faster and whatnot.
@@squid3946 thank you squid. Yeah I know I was just so taken aback by how this video exposed how really lonely and desperate most people are to fit in. 😘
Lol, thanks for watching 😅🫶
TAKE YA MEDS
Girl huh???? Medication will take away your inability to pay attention, which is a huge boon to being a functioning member of society. Take your drugs.
oh you're gonna cop a cease and desist for this one haha
Just wanna say, these "luxury" items are still made by hand. Just by someone who is underpaid and not given enough training and time to produce these items in a proper quality. I know that the video goes into the exploitation of workers, but it find the wording in the beginning still a bit off.
Otherwise thank you for the video. More people need to hear about this.
thanks for the clarification and thanks for watching 😊
I would be like a little kid in this place. So much fabulousness! You looked like you were having a lot of fun there, Jesus. I hope you got the small Dior wicker bag. It was so cute. You're right, too. MOMCOCO is handbag heaven.
When I hear luxury I hear "can pass down to your kids as an inheritance", "need to buy insurance on it just in case fire damage, flood, etc". Doesn't fall apart as soon as you get it or just a few months after.
Quality is going down in some cases
on the topic of replicas, I've live in Turkey all my life until 2 months ago where you see fake designer in almost every corner. Not even proper stores, they sell them in stalls at farmer's market or on a piece of cloth on the streets. I was in the need of a handbag yet had no money since I was in school and didn't want to burden my parents with an expensive one, so I got a style that I liked from a stall which was a Prada replica. The og bag is around 79-84K Turkish Liras while mine was around 150-250 Turkish liras. It looked identical and whenever I told someone that it was a replica, people seemed to be in shock and go "I could never tell". I have family who lives abroad and they weren't so familiar with the said replicas. I complimented one of their bags (bc it was a really nice bag) and she went "well, you have a Prada. its nothing compared to that" in a joking manner and she was surprised when I told her that it was a knock-off. It's all about social currency rather than the material value of the item.
The bad costumer service DO WORK. Silly people give them money instead of getting the heck out of the stores and going somewhere else. I've walked out of stores for less SO people need to take responsibility for the shit ya'll willing to take from a luxury store. Oprah wanna go back and forth. That asian dude buying that purse after the attitude. I would verbaly drag them and take my money to another store
It's like trauma bonding- loving the person who abuses you even more.
You’ve got a point
Not very intelligent people just want to be “popular” and validated not matter what
Frankly speaking, I bought a coach bag thinking that it would make me feel better, but it turned to make me feel crippled.
Wow, how so? Hope you feel better
@@Itsbabygirlt I recovered, thanks 🌹
Sorry but "Welcome to Louis Vuitton, we don't accept EBT" took me out. That's the only people I ever see with that brand.
Obviously you need to get around more.
This reeks of classism
I totally agree with you but Miu Miu isn’t a new luxury brand though.
Yeah, I meant they’ve had a recent surge in popularity
Chanel supported the naz!’s so who wants to support them anyways
for the poor and middle class!? what??? how do poor people afford these?
Yeah I don’t buy that for a second rich people by luxury.
Very easy. They save, use credit cards, get loans, buy now & pay later etc
@@Rlrlrl1962 right? like they r way too expensive for me to buy
I wanna know who lied to you all and said that the rich don’t buy luxury because they do. Notice I said rich; not celebrities
Imagine a sales associate at Hermes, saying you can't get this bag you peasant!
that may actually convince people to buy more bags, lol
I choked 🤣😭
I make bags and other accessories by hand. It takes a lot of time and skill. But friends and family would think I’m too expensive selling a leather bag or crochet hat but will buy some crap designer item for 5times the price.
35:53 the grime of life, lived in, and abandoned is the reality of where luxury almost always ends up...discarded. In fashion today, new clean smell (no ownership) and how everything looks the same, until it's used, lived in, worn. Beauty is many things to many people and that lady's art education? She should of learned about this her 1st year. This is where art and fashion blur the lines, push them, and reshape the "i would never wear that" to "i can't believe i didn't own this sooner"
I briefly worked at Louis Vuitton on Sloane Street in London, but quit after a few weeks. The amount of ABUSE that I endured from some coworkers and managers was incredible.
Also, we had to “screen” Asian customers, for what they call “grey market” customers; that is, Asian customers buying the same item in different LV locations, often paying cash, and selling it for double the cost in places like China. So racial profiling was a huge part of the sales associate position. Horrible company to work for. 👎🏼
whoa, sorry you had to experience that. That must have been traumatising for the customers who were profiled and treated differently
I Crochet my clothes. At least i have a rough idea of who's being exploited.
😂 don’t let me call the authorities
I am an amateur perfumer and can say most perfumes aren’t as marked up as other luxury items. Natural ingredients are incredibly expensive.,however be mindful of fragrance concentrations. If you are paying over 80 bucks for an Eau Fraiche, Toliette, or cologne concentration (I am looking at you Replica) you are being robbed, lol.
Replica my beloved nemesis. Demeter is a good choice for a company that does similar things
They got excessively greedy and arrogant after covid. Their sales artificially boomed because of the stimmy money. LVMH and Kering thought their industry was recession proof. They raised their prices to fuck all and started outsourcing to foreign manufacturers in China and Thailand. You're gonna make me pay a premium price for a premium European brand and your sneakers are made in China? Conglomerate luxury is so gross and artificial. There's nothing scarce about these products, you can order almost anything you want from any LVMH or Kering brand. This is why so many people are spending hundreds on vintage tees, because they're ACTUALLY limited.