Most Overpriced Designer? | Page 53 | the Fashion Spot

Most Overpriced Designer?

BALMAIN is extremely overpriced but I believe it's worth it. I mean no one else has achieved what Decardin does :) I totally support him :heart:
 
Indeed everything RTW is mass produced but the "care" how it is done varies a lot (The Tom Ford Suits from Zegna are fine). I hate it how a lot of expensive brands/designers don’t even make sure that in striped clothing the body part matches the sleeve part.

Actually there was a study done by a bunch of people that had the money to buy TF stuff to rip it apart and test the fabric, etc. The group did this for a menswear blog and found that TF was inferior fabric and material compared to Zegna Couture. TF only measured up a little past EZ Mainline...like the mainline you see at Filenes in mountains and mountains of suits. Z. Couture. TF MTM sucks too, know 2 people personally that got their money back because the suits were totally screwed behind alteration.
 
Balmain

Slashed army t-shirt

$1,625



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net-a-porter
 
Louis Vuitton pump- $9,920
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Balenciaga shoes- $7,450
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style
*prices from US Bazaar June/July 2010 magazine*
 
^I'm not certain the Balenciaga pumps are terribly overpriced.

They are covered with extricate pieces of croc leather which is a very expensive and stiff kind of leather that would require lots of treatment to take the proper shape for the shoe (not to mention to be comfortable to wear).
The heel also looks like a nightmare to produce.

So yeah, it's extravagantly priced but compared to some of the items in this thread, the price isn't totally shameful.
 
Louis Vuitton pump- $9,920


Balenciaga shoes- $7,450

style
*prices from US Bazaar June/July 2010 magazine*

i think the vuitton pump prices got misprinted. i think the skirt in that editorial has the $9k price tag and the pumps have a $2k price tag which remains on par for croc/gator designer pumps.

and balenciaga, well, is balenciaga. while those shoes didn't stand out as my favorites from that collection, those shoes remain pabsolute pieces of art.
 
Not only overpriced but I know that Balmain Homme has some of the most tackiest pieces I have ever seen!!

Also dsquared price points are always ridiculous.
 
Finally someone said it. they make some nice outfits, but nothing exceptional.
And the materials aren't even some expensive or original stuff which would justify -in part- the price. :rolleyes:

is that "finally" meant to be ironic?:huh:
maybe this sounds a bit harsh, and what i am about to say is by no means exclusively related to your comment, but this thread (and most famously perhaps its first, now archive, part) has been centered almost entirely around the outrageous prices balmain has...
i doubt Decarnin could ever cease to surprise us, and i am sure more pictures will pop up with brocade blazers reaching a couple hundred thousands (i'm kidding... or, just kind of)

but the thing is, isn't the topic a bit tired already?
balmain will be expensive, just as valentino is supposed to be red and girly (someone please tell Chiuri and Piccioli...) and while new examples of how overpriced it is, do add value to this thread, the usual and recurrent "i can't believe it's so expensive! why, oh why is a cut out tshirt so expensive!?" don't really contribute to make the thread grow (if it's not merely in its length)

as always, it is understandable, and we've all had that "i'm speechless, she is so gorgeous" moment in the models threads, or a "pure perfection:heart::heart::heart:" comment on an alber elbaz collection, but really, there should be a way of flicking through a 50 pages long thread, without having to go through all the comments that essentially overstate something that has already been said.
just like off topic posts are deleted, or reposts, or replied photos... can't we do something about going "overtopic"?
there should be a way to structure the threads so that posts could be "publicly" liked or acknowledged (sort of how fb works?) so that they wouldn't have to be split in two/three/... parts because of their length in pages (not content)
 
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i think what alot of people forget is the quality of the material used and the craftsmanship that goes into it, like Harumi said, Crocodile skin takes alot to treat, dye and shape into the preferred shape, thats why it costs so much
yeah balmain is overpriced, and i've even admitted it but alot of the work is done by hand, like the bleaching of jeans and embroidery done on alot of their pieces
 
i think what alot of people forget is the quality of the material used and the craftsmanship that goes into it, like Harumi said, Crocodile skin takes alot to treat, dye and shape into the preferred shape, thats why it costs so much
yeah balmain is overpriced, and i've even admitted it but alot of the work is done by hand, like the bleaching of jeans and embroidery done on alot of their pieces

and the work of many luxury brands gets done by hand by artisans in italy and france (and labor in france ain't cheap).

many commenters try to compare luxury brands (and their prices) to other lower-cost brands (and their prices). those same lower-cost brands that buy their wares from manufacturers in india and china that use child and slave labor. let's also not forget all of the sweatshops in the second and third world that many of these big box retailers also use. some right in our backyard in mexico and central america. in the end, you get what you pay for.
 
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I think Rodarte is a bit overpriced. I saw a price tag of one of the pieces of F/W 08 and I cringed. :lol Even Bryanboy admits it's way pricey!
 
I think Rodarte is a bit overpriced. I saw a price tag of one of the pieces of F/W 08 and I cringed. :lol Even Bryanboy admits it's way pricey!

"a bit" ?? :ninja:

barring their rodarte x target collection, i've never seen anything from them under $2k minimum with $3k generally being the price for their trademark cobweb sweaters.
 
^^ and Rodarte (or so they say) is a clear example of what you just mentioned in your previous post regarding where things are made, and who actually makes them.
Haven't I read that they work with an extremely small group of people and do most of their stuff by hand? All the knits, the dyes... it's sure no mass production
 

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