Press: Kelly girls

While our site reads “Shallow Obsessing strongly Encouraged“, there is so much a lot more to the people of purse blog and purse Forum. Boasting over 68,000 registered members, The purse Forum is one of the fastest growing and a lot of active communities on the web. Nestled in the huge forum are sub-forums upon sub-forums of members. These members have congregated because of their passion for handbags yet in the end have formed much more. lots of have met others and become great friends, while groups of members are enjoying meeting up to shop and eat. This past spring a group of Hermes members did just that, resulting in a amazing weekend and a feature in the new York Times. Christine Muhlke from the new York Times met with the Hermes ladies to see a little bit into their world. yesterday in a special style section of the NYT was an alluring post about some of the women behind the Hermes group. For a fun read about our incredible Hermes Forum please check out the post at NYT!

Special thanks to all of the ladies who participated and Christine for featuring the amazing members of our forum!

It’s incredible the girls you can meet on the Internet. It’s a democracy that brings together collectors, fetishists and everyday lovers from around the globe to share their knowledge about, say, meerkats or Churchill. now even lovers of the world’s a lot of expensive handbags are geeking out.

Purseblog.com is a two-year-old site whose 58,000 forum members chat about Marc, Louis, Jimmy et al. The site’s a lot of elite forum is, naturally, Hermès, where women with handles like H_addict and BirKineSS post their most current purchases, rhapsodize over their dream sacs and go into so much detail about leather and hardware you’d think it was a Dungeons & Dragons site.

Read the rest of the post after the jump!

“Cyclamen only comes in epsom and chèvre,” reads a normal post, “and there are no chèvre Evelynes.”

There’s also a real-time component to the community, like the new Yorkers who hit the Madison Avenue store every Friday; the group that went to Las Vegas, dining at restaurants like the Olive garden to save money for their higher shared purpose; and the Asian contingent that met in Singapore.

During an early spring weekend, nearly 30 of the faithful converged on Manhattan to put a face to the avatar. but first they shopped “” some members acknowledging one another from their purses. (“I knew that was your Lindy!”) The perky blond Southerners stuck together, as did the women in black, while locals couldn’t help flaunting their relationships with the S.A.’s, or sales assistants, the true keys to the kingdom. (Forum regulars have been scolded by their S.A.’s after publishing their purchases, angering the have-nots.)

After scouring the store, SoCal and traceyd adjourned to La Goulue for Champagne. (Out of embarrassment, all of the women interviewed requested that only their screen names be used.)

“We met in the Chloé room,” said SoCal, an attractive 30-something brunette in jeans, heels, a tailored jacket and a crocodile collier de chien bracelet “” or C.D.C., as the ladies refer to it. Traceyd, an impeccably maintained upper east Side boho with a taste for ethnic jewelry, had posted, “Should I give my 16-year-old a Paddy?”

Like others in the forum, traceyd had traded up to Hermès, selling her 50-plus “It” bags to focus on Birkins, which start at $7,000: “I thought if I had a Birkin, that’s all I needed. but it wasn’t.” She now has three Birkins, as well as eight other styles. But, she added, Hermès has made her a lot more selective: “I’ve gotten less crap in other areas of my life.”

Though they’d never met F2F, they knew a lot about one another, encouraged by threads like “Do you ever not long for anything else?”

“The people on the blog think the Hermès girls are the most snobby,” SoCal said. and while she acknowledged that the Hermès demographic is older and a lot more educated, she asserted that they’re not a bunch of “trust-fund girls,” just powerful women who happen to have a fetish.

I asked SoCal what she does. “I’m a tenured professor of psychology,” she said with a laugh.

And traceyd is a successful screenwriter. They were joined by an anesthesiologist, a surgeon, a pharmacist, a lawyer, a corporate risk management consultant, another psychologist and a designer from Australia the next evening, at an upper east Side town house. They weren’t all draped in scarves and enamel bracelets; one wore sweats. In fact, the a lot more they spoke, the a lot more it became clear that they were collectors, not shopaholics “” another rabbit hole entirely.

“That’s a 28 in noisette!” one said, checking a Kelly from across the room.

“It’s havane, not black!” another said, showing off her C.D.C. “It matches my ebène Massai!”

But soon their conversations relied on work, parenting, hobbies, the war.

“It’s beyond bags,” said shopmom411, a Berkeleyite whose articles are gone along with by the Epictetus quote “Know, first, who you are; and then adorn yourself accordingly.” She added, “This group has opened up my world in a way that nothing else ever has.”

Someone shouted, “Heather’s getting a divorce. What scarf must we get her?”

For this sisterhood, which is planning a pilgrimage to Paris in ’08, their purses transcend status. “It’s a way of life,” explained Ninja Sue, who gotten her 12th bag that day.

Shopmom411 said, “We saw all these women with Birkins on Madison, and I don’t think any of them appreciate what they have.” The gang clucked in disbelief. “Some of us have a lot more bags than the really affluent people,” she said. “We’re just average ladies with a passion.”

Article by means of new York Times

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