Monday, December 22, 2008

Miu Miu Spongy Leather Rounded Tote



The Miu Miu Spongy Leather Rounded Tote is the perfect bag for your jeans and tee shirt outfit adding a vibrant splash of color. The rounded tote is a great everyday bag, that features two handles to hold, and the perfect compartments with a zippered middle section. The inside of the bag makes it perfect to organize, which is what we all need from our handbags. Rather than having to grab in your bag hoping to find what you are looking for, a handbag like this allows easy access and order. The gold hardware is subtle, seen on the handles and the Miu Miu logo.

My new ring



Gifted on my 27th Birthday :)

Miu Miu Wooden Handle Tote



The Italian brand has created an amazing bag made of soya leather with a wooden handle and detachable buckle shoulder strap which will match perfectly with your casual looks ! Price (not too dear, not too cheap): £670

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Tuesday, November 11, 2008





This is the Louis Vuitton Alma MM handbag that’s inspired by the shape invented in the 30s by Gaston Vuitton.

The Alma MM is a classic of the House. Hand held, this bag is covered with Monogram Vernis leather and is closed with a padlock.

Louis Vuitton’s Alma MM handbag features: bottom studs to protect the base of the bag, a removable key bell, a padlock that provides extra security for the closure of the bag, can be hand held or carried on the shoulder, integral closure by double zipper and looks stunning with golden brass pieces.

You will find the two inside patch pockets and a cell phone compartment handy. The lining is in textile and trimmings in Monogram Vernis leather.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Sole facts

Sandals originated in warm climates where the soles of the feet needed protection but the top of the foot needed to be cool.

4,000 years ago the first shoes were made of a single piece of rawhide that enveloped the foot for both warmth and protection.

In Europe pointed toes on shoes were fashionable from the eleventh to the fifteenth centuries.


Friday, October 10, 2008

The ultimate 'IT' bag

The Hermes Birkin, bag is my pic for the ultimate 'IT' bag.




Hermes is the world's most recognisable brand for handbags and believe it or not, it probably the only handbag whose value increases with time.These are uber expensive and stores that sell them usually have a "wait list" for these. They can cost from $7500 (exluding taxes) and can go upto 5 or sometimes 6 digit figures !!!!

Its manufactured out of exotic animal skin, and can be made to order. The interior is made of goat skin and dyed to match the exterior of the bag. The metal work (the lock, keys, buckle hardware and feet studs) is plated with gold or other precious metal like palladium.The metal lock may be covered with leather as an option when custom ordering. Certain notable Hermès clients have paved buckle hardware with diamonds, notoriously resulting in one black crocodile skin Birkin which notably sold for close to $65,000 at auction in 2005.Birkin lock keys are enclosed in a type of leather lanyard known as a "clochette" which is typically, but not necessarily, carried by looping it through one of a Birkin's handles. The Birkin bag may be locked by closing the bag's top flaps over all buckle loops, wrapping the buckle straps, and closing the lock on the front hardware.Locks and keys are number-coded.


The following women own multiple Birkin handbags -
Victoria Beckham
Carla Bruni
Sofia Capola
Jodie Foster
Katie Holmes
Jade Jagger
Kate Moss
Julia Roberts
Martha Stewart
Jane Birkin (the bag is named after her!!!)




Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Red Soles

Christain Louboutin once said, " A woman carries her clothes, but it's a shoe which carries a woman."

Ever wonder where Christian Louboutin’s signature red soles came from? In his own words the amazing shoe maker explains' " I did not really choose the red sole. Its more like the red sole came to me and had to stay with me. It started as a happy accident, which I kept. I was very inspired by pop art so all my drawings were really full of colors. So the first prototype arrives. Its very similar to my designs so I was very happy. But something was missing. Thank God I had this girl with me who was painting her nails. Grabbed her nailpolish - thank you to Chanel for that! I grabbed the nailpolish and I painted the sole."

My very own 4



Monday, September 8, 2008

High Heels Horror


Believe it or not...if not taken care off High Heels could turn into horror as you age.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

The return of the High Heels


Eye-wateringly pointed toes. Towering spike heels. Sexy shoes are back - and they've never looked more deadly !!!!

Sculpted into wicked points and elevated on devilishly tall heels, the shoe shape for the season - the latest thing to earn fashion's favourite sobriquet 'must-have' - has arrived. The glossies will pinpoint the best, the High Street will replicate them - and women? Well, women will be hooked, probably against their better judgment.

Impossible to walk in? Perhaps. But these shoes are looking good. And, as only high stilettos can, they are making legs look damn good, too.The basic styling of the new killer heel is universally flattering.

Give shoes a low vamp (the bit where the shoe upper covers the toes) to slim the ankle, a high heel to force the calf muscle to tighten for a leaner line, and a toe shape that is pointed (but not to silly, winkle-picker lengths) and you give legs a rather lovely lengthening effect.
Look at the way barefoot models always seem to pose, somewhat unnaturally, pointing the balls of their feet down to emulate the effect of a foot in heels. It's how legs - and not just model legs - look their best. All sharp angles and narrow tips, the newest heels fulfil all the above criteria and combine a dangerous elegance to boot. This provides a very different appeal from the high shoe of choice over the past few seasons; the platform.

While this found favour with women who appreciated its kindly promise of extra height and comfort, combined with a reassuringly stride-friendly clunkiness, the new shoe comes in a shape that men understand. Give men the choice between a weighty platform and a pair of hazardously high spiky heels and there is no hesitation.


The latter are man-traps (surely the reason that at the Christian Louboutin's shoe sanctuary, there is inevitably a man loitering, uncomfortable but intent on buying sexy heels for someone special). The antithesis of the good-girl ballerina slipper - that easy, round-toed style that has ruled the High Street for the past four years - the shape of shoe that stalked autumn/winter catwalks brings to mind the fabulously pointy shoes of the late Fifties and late Eighties. While the new heels might not look so friendly as a blunt toe or a platform, they are infinitely more chic. After some of the fairly hideous shoes-as-sculpture that we have seen recently - where ugly heels, carved details and mad proportions have become mainstream - the return to a more classic allure may come as something of an aesthetic relief. Of course, some women have never worn anything else.

Of course, the shoes do not exist in a vacuum. They work with the new season’s clothes; catwalks full of austere, grown-up fashion, with lots of stark, covered-up shifts, rigorous lines and a great many high, puritan, necklines. When the designers obliterate all obvious sex appeal from the clothes, it leaves little choice; sex must exude from a shoe. Ergo, these are powerfully seductive.

As ever, when fashion decides to revisit an item, the style is subtly but irrevocably changed. The trend moves on. And that is probably never truer than at this moment because, according to the jungle drums, fashion has lost its obsession with It-bags. The It-shoe is about to have its day. So this won’t be about an Imelda Marcos-style weakness for hoarding pretty shoes. This will be about owning the item of footwear that says it all — no matter what.

It-shoes will be special in every way; they will pack a punch, make a distinctive fashion statement and, in keeping with the It-bag phenomenon, probably be significantly more distinctive and expensive than any others you have ever owned.

Will people stump up hundreds and thousands the green paper for It-shoes, in the same way that they did for It-bags? Perhaps the change of focus from bags to shoes is actually a response to the leaner times. (Hmm!!). Maybe focusing on shoes makes sense. We all actually have to wear shoes, and that’s not the case with a handbag. We do talk about cost in terms of ruppees-per-wear. A pair of Christian Louboutin’s heels will be more comfortable to wear than less well-made shoes that don’t, for instance, have the support and the cushioning pads under the feet. You will want to wear them more often, and that makes a difference.And when you are looking for innovation and you want something different, something like the pointy stiletto shoe-boot from Golden Goose alternate that we will be stocking in September, it can cost more.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

My very own - 3




My very own - 2




My very own - 1




Jimmy Choo






They say that every woman should own at least one pair of three-inch heels. And today women have their pick of top designers brands such as Manolo Blahnik, Fendi and, of course, Jimmy Choo. The exquisite detail, impeccable quality and luxurious style of these brands immediately explain Imelda Marcos's immense shoe collection. Women around the world prize Jimmy Choo shoes for their classic design, fine craftsmanship and surprising comfort.

Just six years old, Jimmy Choo's is run by its founder Tamara Mellon, formerly of Vogue, and Sandra Choi, creative director. Through nine collections, they have created a superb brand with limited, exclusive availability. Not your everyday dress shoes, these are the creme de la creme of designer shoes for evening-wear. While many of us can't afford them, it's free to drool!!!
The company launched in 1996 by London shoe designer Jimmy Choo and Vogue accessories editor Tamara Mellon has become a household name.

Jimmy Choo offers a fresh selection of innovative, trendy shoes each season without abandoning the classic silhouettes that never go out of fashion. The company also makes handbags and clutch purses, which are frequently seen in the hands of celebs like Cameron Diaz and Sarah Jessica Parker.

Choo himself, sold his stake in the company in 2001, continues to handcraft shoes in London under the Jimmy Choo Couture label. In 2003, Queen Elizabeth II made him an officer of the Order of the British Empire. Mellon and creative director Sandra Choi, who worked with Choo before the company's launch and is the niece of his wife, oversee the ready-to-wear collection. As of 2007, Jimmy Choo has more than 60 retail stores worldwide. The shoes are also available online and in department stores such as Neiman Marcus in the U.S. and Harrods in Great Britain, though certain styles are exclusive to Jimmy Choo boutiques.