About
Our Knockoffs
One of the biggest questions we get asked is, Are the bags at Designer Handbags City Illegal ?
Answer:
The handbags we sell are not Illegal because they are
not Counterfeit bags. Counterfeit bags are the bags
you see being pushed on New York City street corners
and in back rooms of storefronts. Common sense would
tell you that they are selling this way for a reason,
they are illegal. These bags look exact and have infringing
labels and logos, thats against the law. Not only are
they breaking the law but so are the people who buy
them. It's plain and simple.
The
bags we sell look similar, turn heads just as well,
and best yet, cost less. These are the most popular
bags being sold on the Internet only ours are priced
lower. Thats because we buy in bulk and work with volume.
Our
bags also come with a 30 day money
back guarantee, try getting that from street
vendors or people who have to run after selling you
an illegal bag. We even offer free shipping on orders
within the United States and over $50, other sites don't.
Best of all we have been in business since 1995 which
is a long time in Internet years. We are not a fly by
night company and will be here when others are gone.
We
hope you will enjoy our products and see the value in
them, we get new shipments often so check back from
time to time.
Happy
Shopping!
Some Interesting Reading,
Newspaper: New York Times
By: Rob Walker
Date: December 12, 2004
The It Bag
Last year, Louis Vuitton released a new handbag line that became a tremendous hit in the marketplace. It was the kind of success -- more than 70,000 bags and accessories were sold in the first year -- that earns a media-friendly nickname like the It bag. Also last year, Dooney & Bourke released a handbag line that looked quite a bit like Louis Vuitton's trendy model, albeit at a far lower price. Dooney & Bourke named its new product the It Bag. The company has sold about 500,000 of these. The most popular version seems to be the one that looks the most like the Vuitton. Not surprisingly, the matter ended up in the courts. This past summer a federal judge in the Southern District of New York issued a ruling saying that while Dooney & Bourke had ''copied'' Louis Vuitton, it had not violated the French fashion giant's intellectual property rights, and could go about its business. The It Bag might be a knockoff -- but it's an acceptable knockoff.
Louis Vuitton is appealing this decision, and the company declined to comment. But the basics of the story are laid out in the judge's order. In 2002, the designer Marc Jacobs invited the Japanese artist Takashi Murakami to come up with a fresh take on the Louis Vuitton ''toile monogram'' -- the famous intertwined LV logo interspersed with flower shapes -- for a new line of bags. This led to the creation of the Monogram Multicolore design, in 33 colors, arrayed on handbags in a repeating pattern against a white or black background. The bags made their debut on Paris runways in October 2002 and then showed up at prestige retail outlets in March 2003, where they sold for up to $3,950. Press reports suggested that the Murakami bag eventually racked up $300 million or more in sales.
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Dooney & Bourke has been around since 1975, and also uses a logo made of interlocking letters, D and B. The company's president and chief designer, Peter Dooney, met in Milan in March 2003 with a group of teenage girls selected by Teen Vogue and dubbed the It Team, with the goal of coming up with bags that young people would like. As the judge wrote, the girls ''were photographed peering into a store window featuring a Monogram Multicolore display in white, and viewing a black Monogram Multicolore swatch in a factory.'' Dooney apparently testified that this experience ''reinforced'' his thinking that this was a look that people would like. In July 2003, the It Bag collection appeared in stores, featuring the interlocked D&B logo, in multiple colors, repeated in a pattern against a white (and later black) background. They cost between $125 and $350. The lawsuit came in April 2004.
The bags are not identical: aside from the different letters in the logos, the D&B version renders its repeated mark in a smaller size and also features multicolor zippers. ''The colors used on the Dooney & Bourke bags,'' the judge added in a brief aesthetic flight, ''are noticeably toned down, and consequently fail to evoke the characteristic 'friction' sparked by Murakami's bright, clashing colors.''
Nevertheless, Louis Vuitton is rather sensitive on the issue of bags that look like theirs but aren't. Flat-out Vuitton counterfeits -- designed expressly to look exactly like the real thing -- can go for a mere $35. These fakes, clearly illegal, arrive in huge container loads from China and elsewhere and are distributed well beyond New York's Canal Street. Suburban ''purse parties'' -- Tupperware-like gatherings but with knockoff handbags instead of cookware -- have caught the attention of law enforcement. High-end bag makers say losses from fakes could run into the tens of millions each year.
But while the case against counterfeiters is clear-cut, the one against Dooney & Bourke seems not to be. The judge did not buy Louis Vuitton's argument that some consumers might think that the It Bag is a Vuitton product. A lawyer for Dooney & Bourke, Thomas J. McAndrew, insists that the company does not want such confusion. ''There was a trend,'' McAndrew says. ''And in the fashion industry when someone does one thing, others tend to follow, or do their own rendition.'' Dooney wasn't stealing, in other words; it was sampling, remixing. The way the culture operates now, he suggests, makes this kind of knockoff not just acceptable but inevitable. ''You either have to get on that wave of the trend or the style,'' he says, ''or miss it.''