Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nah. It's back-handed marketing attempts, usually planted by someone representing the company.
Has to be this. Deluxe hand bags has to be a dying market. I have 3 college DDs so not into designer bags but they are actively anti-materialistic. It's wasteful. It's not cool. No thanks. This us what I hear about bags, shoes, clothes, etc.
Extreme minimalism is a thing.
To me the designer hand bags are now linked to ghetto/looting culture. It is a total turnoff.
You are definitely in the minority. You sound poor.
Not poor.
+1 not poor & not showing off my "new money"
+2
You sound dumb. Not everyone wears a designer bag everyday. Most people switch it up with outfits like anything else. Have you NO style?
Keep up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a forum. Some posters are noticing that designer status symbols are not desirable among many in younger generations. It is not NO style, it is a different style.
You keep up. Or are you the one trying to push designer handbags in half a dozen threads?
Not PP you are talking to but as I noted earlier, this is the stance of a PARTICULAR kind of GenZ-er, read: white, affluent people who grew up with abundance and nice things and so don't understand the need for some people who didn't have the background growing up to want to treat themselves once they have managed to acquire some level of success. And I say this as someone who grew up with enough and is not spending any of my money on designer things.
Also, DCUM is a place where women come to revel in looking unattractive as they are super afraid someone will look at them. It is odd.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe. Or maybe gen Z does not equate fancy expensive designer handbags with "attractive".
Anonymous wrote:It's a forum. Some posters are noticing that designer status symbols are not desirable among many in younger generations. It is not NO style, it is a different style.
You keep up. Or are you the one trying to push designer handbags in half a dozen threads?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nah. It's back-handed marketing attempts, usually planted by someone representing the company.
Has to be this. Deluxe hand bags has to be a dying market. I have 3 college DDs so not into designer bags but they are actively anti-materialistic. It's wasteful. It's not cool. No thanks. This us what I hear about bags, shoes, clothes, etc.
Extreme minimalism is a thing.
To me the designer hand bags are now linked to ghetto/looting culture. It is a total turnoff.
You are definitely in the minority. You sound poor.
Not poor.
+1 not poor & not showing off my "new money"
+2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nah. It's back-handed marketing attempts, usually planted by someone representing the company.
Has to be this. Deluxe hand bags has to be a dying market. I have 3 college DDs so not into designer bags but they are actively anti-materialistic. It's wasteful. It's not cool. No thanks. This us what I hear about bags, shoes, clothes, etc.
Extreme minimalism is a thing.
To me the designer hand bags are now linked to ghetto/looting culture. It is a total turnoff.
You are definitely in the minority. You sound poor.
Not poor.
+1 not poor & not showing off my "new money"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nah. It's back-handed marketing attempts, usually planted by someone representing the company.
Has to be this. Deluxe hand bags has to be a dying market. I have 3 college DDs so not into designer bags but they are actively anti-materialistic. It's wasteful. It's not cool. No thanks. This us what I hear about bags, shoes, clothes, etc.
Extreme minimalism is a thing.
To me the designer hand bags are now linked to ghetto/looting culture. It is a total turnoff.
You are definitely in the minority. You sound poor.
Not poor.
+1 not poor & not showing off my "new money"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nah. It's back-handed marketing attempts, usually planted by someone representing the company.
Has to be this. Deluxe hand bags has to be a dying market. I have 3 college DDs so not into designer bags but they are actively anti-materialistic. It's wasteful. It's not cool. No thanks. This us what I hear about bags, shoes, clothes, etc.
Extreme minimalism is a thing.
To me the designer hand bags are now linked to ghetto/looting culture. It is a total turnoff.
You are definitely in the minority. You sound poor.
Not poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know everyone is in a different place vis-a-vis working remote/staying in vs. going out, but there have been a lot of threads about women wanting to up their game as they go back to work in an office or are just wanting to get out of a rut. Almost every response tells women (particularly older ones) to focus on haircut, better skin care, good shoes and a good bag. It's a quick way to perk up a tired wardrobe and as others have noted, people do seem to have more cash on hand these days.
Come on. Up your game with better skills. No one would tell a man to get better hair, skin, shoes, bag.