| 
	
		
			
				| » GC Stats |  
	| Members: 331,628 Threads: 115,712
 Posts: 2,207,745
 
 |  
		| Welcome to our newest member, samanthacavs594 |  | 
	
		|  |  |  
	
	
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 02:23 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: New York, NY - so nice, they named it twice 
						Posts: 688
					 |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by ΑΓΔSquirrelGirl  I never saw the point in saving a whole paycheck for one purse or necklace. The whole point of designer brands are to show status and wealth. If you don't have it and waste your money trying to keep up...I hope you learn better before you miss rent and eat Ramen to purchase the newest trendy purse. |  I used to manage a department of sixteen recent college grads, almost all women.  I was paying them $30k a year.  They were living in NYC apartments with one or two roommates to make ends meet (and probably eating Ramen noodles).  They ALL had real Kate Spades, Coach Bags, Louis, Tiffany pieces and whatever else.
 
To me, if you don't have $400 in cash to put in the purse, then you shouldn't be carrying a $400 bag.  
 
My 2 cents.
 
(Currently carrying a $60 Vera Bradley Bag with a knock off Louis checkbook and a wallet from Fossil)
		 
				__________________Delta Phi Epsilon
 Esse Quam Videri
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 02:45 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Apr 2005 
						Posts: 13,593
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			If Tiffany is out, does that mean silverjewlryclub.com is in?  Because I'm so all over that.
		 
				__________________ From the SigmaTo the K!
Polyamorous, Pansexual and Proud of it!
It Gets Better |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 06:54 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Aug 2002 
						Posts: 9,977
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			When I worked at the Limited, Tiffany pieces were some of the "rewards" we could collect at the end of the year. I have the Venetian Link neckalce and bracelet but I rarely wear them these days because I was seeing little (think pre-teen) girls in them.    |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-11-2007, 02:11 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| Super Moderator |  | 
					Join Date: Jul 2001 Location: On the beach. Well....not really but near it. :0) 
						Posts: 13,576
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by GeekyPenguin  ...I have the Venetian Link neckalce and bracelet but I rarely wear them these days because I was seeing little (think pre-teen) girls in them.   |  Which is exactly why Tiffany jacked up the prices. The article basicly went on to say that the investors an the company want to woo back the higher paying clientel that Tiffany has a (long time) relationship with (brand loyalty), not the fly-by-night-sweet-sixteen-here-today-forgotten-tomorrow crowd. When something becomes trendy and everyone has it, it loses it's "special" value. Burberry is a classic example of this. A woman in the article remarked that when she had gone to a Tiffany store to get a gift for her teen daughter, the store was crowded like Macys. What was the point of her being there in that atmosphere when she could go to a store like Macys for that. Someone else in the article said that they didnt wear their Tiffany jewerly piece anymore because "everyone has it".
 
posted by Kilarney Rose
 
	Quote: 
	
		| Small Southeastern College junior Intern #2, a member of XYZ sorority, agrees.  "Seriously, nobody I know wears that stuff anymore.  Everyone had (Tiffany silver jewelry) my senior year of high school, but that was a long time ago." |  And that's the attitude that Tiffany's feels will hurt them in the long run.
		 
				__________________ Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. ** Greater Service, Greater Progress Since 1922
				 Last edited by NinjaPoodle; 01-11-2007 at 02:38 PM.
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-11-2007, 03:00 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: The Emerald City 
						Posts: 3,416
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by NinjaPoodle  Which is exactly why Tiffany jacked up the prices. The article basicly went on to say that the investors an the company want to woo back the higher paying clientel that Tiffany has a (long time) relationship with (brand loyalty), not the fly-by-night-sweet-sixteen-here-today-forgotten-tomorrow crowd. When something becomes trendy and everyone has it, it loses it's "special" value. Burberry is a classic example of this. A woman in the article remarked that when she had gone to a Tiffany store to get a gift for her teen daughter, the store was crowded like Macys. What was the point of her being there in that atmosphere when she could go to a store like Macys for that. Someone else in the article said that they didnt wear their Tiffany jewerly piece anymore because "everyone has it". |  When I think Tiffany, I think diamonds...not the silver stuff they started selling so they would have something for every income level. And to most women, I would wager that they still think of diamonds when they think of Tiffany. I don't think Tiffany has anything to worry about. Anyone who's been in a Tiffany store knows that silver is only a small part of its collection, and if you haven't been in a Tiffany store, well, you're probably not in its target market anyway. 
  
If I was LV, I would be worried. Girls in middle school carrying an adult purse, just because "everyone has one!"? That's very anti-luxury, and therefore hurts the LV brand. Why does it matter more for LV than Tiffany? Because the bulk of LV's bags and luggage are "signature" bags...there just isn't variety like at Tiffany. I just bought a beautiful, more expensive Marc Jacobs bag because I would never pay $1,000 for a bag that everyone else has. Coach can get away with it because Coach is only marginally "designer"...most of its bags are in the $275-$400 range. I have several Coach bags, but I carry them because they're classic and professional, not to show off. It is not as much of a status symbol as a LV bag is supposed to be. But now LV is no longer a status symbol...everyone has one, or a knockoff that most people probably think is a real one. The LV store on Rodeo Drive sees a ridiculous amount of foot traffic.
		 
				__________________Gamma Phi Beta
 Love. Labor. Learning. Loyalty.
 
				 Last edited by PeppyGPhiB; 01-11-2007 at 03:02 PM.
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-11-2007, 10:22 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| Super Moderator |  | 
					Join Date: Jul 2001 Location: On the beach. Well....not really but near it. :0) 
						Posts: 13,576
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by PeppyGPhiB  When I think Tiffany, I think diamonds...not the silver stuff they started selling so they would have something for every income level. And to most women, I would wager that they still think of diamonds when they think of Tiffany. I don't think Tiffany has anything to worry about.Anyone who's been in a Tiffany store knows that silver is only a small part of its collection, and if you haven't been in a Tiffany store, well, you're probably not in its target market anyway. 
 If I was LV, I would be worried. Girls in middle school carrying an adult purse, just because "everyone has one!"? That's very anti-luxury, and therefore hurts the LV brand. Why does it matter more for LV than Tiffany? Because the bulk of LV's bags and luggage are "signature" bags...there just isn't variety like at Tiffany. I just bought a beautiful, more expensive Marc Jacobs bag because I would never pay $1,000 for a bag that everyone else has. Coach can get away with it because Coach is only marginally "designer"...most of its bags are in the $275-$400 range. I have several Coach bags, but I carry them because they're classic and professional, not to show off. It is not as much of a status symbol as a LV bag is supposed to be. But now LV is no longer a status symbol...everyone has one, or a knockoff that most people probably think is a real one. The LV store on Rodeo Drive sees a ridiculous amount of foot traffic.
 |  You said what I was thinking.    
				__________________ Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. ** Greater Service, Greater Progress Since 1922 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 07:05 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Jun 2001 Location: WWJMD? 
						Posts: 7,561
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Denise_DPhiE  To me, if you don't have $400 in cash to put in the purse, then you shouldn't be carrying a $400 bag.  
 My 2 cents.
 
 (Currently carrying a $60 Vera Bradley Bag with a knock off Louis checkbook and a wallet from Fossil)
 |  Eh, agree to disagree. I'd rather see someone pay $400 for a bag than carry a knockoff.
		 
				__________________A hiney bird is a bird that flies in perfectly executed, concentric circles until it eventually flies up its own behind and poof! disappears forever....
 -Ken Harrelson
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 07:14 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: 33girl's campaign manager 
						Posts: 2,884
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Denise_DPhiE  I used to manage a department of sixteen recent college grads, almost all women.  I was paying them $30k a year.  They were living in NYC apartments with one or two roommates to make ends meet (and probably eating Ramen noodles).  They ALL had real Kate Spades, Coach Bags, Louis, Tiffany pieces and whatever else.
 To me, if you don't have $400 in cash to put in the purse, then you shouldn't be carrying a $400 bag.
 
 My 2 cents.
 
 (Currently carrying a $60 Vera Bradley Bag with a knock off Louis checkbook and a wallet from Fossil)
 |  I have this horrible horrible conscience that stops me from buying expensive things. Everytime I am about to do it, a little voice inside me says 'that money could feed a family in Africa. You don't need [insert item here].'  
Then I don't buy it and give the money to charity. I need a job where I can buy nice things and give money away.
		 
				__________________I'll take trainwreck for 100 Alex.
 
 And Jesus speaketh, "do unto others as they did unto you because the bitches deserve it".
 
 
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 07:28 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Atlanta area 
						Posts: 5,382
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by centaur532  I have this horrible horrible conscience that stops me from buying expensive things. Everytime I am about to do it, a little voice inside me says 'that money could feed a family in Africa. You don't need [insert item here].' Then I don't buy it and give the money to charity. I need a job where I can buy nice things and give money away.
 |  Centaur, it's great that you do that! 
 
Do you find yourself getting obsessive about it? I mean, do you question "should I buy a Starbuck's coffee or just make it at home?" or is there a price cut off?
 
For me, it kind of comes down the price and usefulness. I have a hard time buying expensive luxury items because I stop and think about better uses for the money, but I waste a ton of money buying little stuff I don't really need.
 
I never bought any Tiffany silver jewelry, but I do have a Tiffany sterling silver swiss army knife keychain that struck me as really funny. It came in all the Tiffany blue packaging. (It was a gift, but I did show it to the person who got it for me, and oddly, I don't worry about it I'm wasting money when I buy stuff for other people.)
		 
				 Last edited by UGAalum94; 01-10-2007 at 07:41 PM.
					
					
						Reason: add note about gift.
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 07:55 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: 33girl's campaign manager 
						Posts: 2,884
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Alphagamuga  Centaur, it's great that you do that! 
 Do you find yourself getting obsessive about it? I mean, do you question "should I buy a Starbuck's coffee or just make it at home?" or is there a price cut off?
 
 For me, it kind of comes down the price and usefulness. I have a hard time buying expensive luxury items because I stop and think about better uses for the money, but I waste a ton of money buying little stuff I don't really need.
 
 I never bought any Tiffany silver jewelry, but I do have a Tiffany sterling silver swiss army knife keychain that struck me as really funny. It came in all the Tiffany blue packaging. (It was a gift, but I did show it to the person who got it for me, and oddly, I don't worry about it I'm wasting money when I buy stuff for other people.)
 |  I don't drink Starbucks coffee at all. I'm all about Fair Trade Coffee. I'm as meticulous about it as a vegetarian is about not eating meat.  
Well, my example-right after the tsunami, I had money from christmas. I wanted this really nice leather jacket that was on sale, but I knew I couldn't justify spending $100 on something I wanted but didn't need when there were people who'd just had their entire lives wiped out halfway around the world. 
It's not a price cutoff, it's just how my conscience feels on a particular day    
This christmas I didn't know what I wanted from my parents and they kept asking, so finally I showed my mother this website : http://www.oxfamamericaunwrapped.com/  and spent $50 investing in a fair trade coffee collaborative.  
I am a privileged westerner as is. I have clean water, clothes, food and shelter.  I have a cell phone and a computer with internet access. I drive a decent car which I can fill with gas whenever I want, no problem.  
Don't get me wrong-I do not begrudge people for wanting and buying expensive items (except Paris Hilton etc. she disgusts me!). It's all a matter of perspective.  
Occasionally I do remind myself that I am allowed to spend large amounts of money on things I want because the cost of living is so different over here. Also I can't save the world, as much as I'd like to. 
Oh, on topic-I own a fake Tiffany necklace. It looks pretty real, not very, but real enough. I'm not sure where it is actually.
		 
				__________________I'll take trainwreck for 100 Alex.
 
 And Jesus speaketh, "do unto others as they did unto you because the bitches deserve it".
 
 
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 08:19 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Atlanta area 
						Posts: 5,382
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			Starbucks was just an example of something one could buy that costs probably five time what it would cost to make something yourself, but that would still wouldn't kick up my "is it immoral to buy this" meter because the amount of money I was handing over wasn't that big. In your case, it would kick up the "is this immoral meter," but for different reasons.
 I didn't see the Unwrapped page before. I've been intrigued by Heifer International in the past and we had a fundraising contest at work for them, but never purchased anything on my own.
 
 If only international fundraising could be the next expensive college fashion trend. . .
 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 09:05 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Nov 2006 
						Posts: 531
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by Alphagamuga  Starbucks was just an example of something one could buy that costs probably five time what it would cost to make something yourself, but that would still wouldn't kick up my "is it immoral to buy this" meter because the amount of money I was handing over wasn't that big. In your case, it would kick up the "is this immoral meter," but for different reasons.
 I didn't see the Unwrapped page before. I've been intrigued by Heifer International in the past and we had a fundraising contest at work for them, but never purchased anything on my own.
 
 If only international fundraising could be the next expensive college fashion trend. . .
 |  I bet we could work that out. Maybe if we found a way to hand out things with the correct trendy labels as rewards for participating in fundraising...
		 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 09:24 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Mar 2006 
						Posts: 3,036
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			The proper Southern fratty sorostitute should be wearing pearls and David Yurman. "Return to Tiffany's" crap was cool in 7th grade.
		 |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 08:27 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Jul 2001 Location: ILL-INI 
						Posts: 7,220
					 |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by centaur532  I don't drink Starbucks coffee at all. I'm all about Fair Trade Coffee. I'm as meticulous about it as a vegetarian is about not eating meat.  
Well, my example-right after the tsunami, I had money from christmas. I wanted this really nice leather jacket that was on sale, but I knew I couldn't justify spending $100 on something I wanted but didn't need when there were people who'd just had their entire lives wiped out halfway around the world. 
It's not a price cutoff, it's just how my conscience feels on a particular day    
This christmas I didn't know what I wanted from my parents and they kept asking, so finally I showed my mother this website : http://www.oxfamamericaunwrapped.com/  and spent $50 investing in a fair trade coffee collaborative.  
I am a privileged westerner as is. I have clean water, clothes, food and shelter.  I have a cell phone and a computer with internet access. I drive a decent car which I can fill with gas whenever I want, no problem.  
Don't get me wrong-I do not begrudge people for wanting and buying expensive items (except Paris Hilton etc. she disgusts me!). It's all a matter of perspective.  
Occasionally I do remind myself that I am allowed to spend large amounts of money on things I want because the cost of living is so different over here. Also I can't save the world, as much as I'd like to. 
Oh, on topic-I own a fake Tiffany necklace. It looks pretty real, not very, but real enough. I'm not sure where it is actually. |  
This is why I can't stand the idea of a wedding registry.  I have dishes and stuff, why would I replace them?
		 
			
			
			
			
				  |  
	
	| 
			
			 
			
				01-10-2007, 09:49 PM
			
			
			
		 |  
	| 
		
			
			| GreekChat Member |  | 
					Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Georgia 
						Posts: 1,343
					      |  |  
	
	| 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
		| 
					Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby  This is why I can't stand the idea of a wedding registry.  I have dishes and stuff, why would I replace them? |  That's why you can register for things like donations to charities if you already have dishes    
(I personally don't have anything close to a full set of dishes.  I am definitely registering for dishes and the donations.  I am fresh outta college and I need some dishes!)
		 
				__________________Delta Sigma Theta "But if she wears the Delta symbol, then her first love is D-S-T ..."
 Omega Phi Alpha "Blue like the colors of night and day, gold like the sun's bright shining ray ..."
 |  
	
		|  |  |  
 
 
	| 
	|  Posting Rules |  
	| 
		
		You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts 
 HTML code is Off 
 |  |  |  
 
 
	
	
		
	
	
 |