There’s the ghairat brigade, there’s the beghairat brigade and then there’s the Hermes Birkin brigade.
In a polarised society where might is right and pomp and show take precedence over a lot of important issues, the obsession of the upper-class socialites with European luxury brands is a secret to none. Who can forget our ex-foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar’s official trip to India where her Dolce & Gabbana sunglasses and $10,000 Birkin bag became the topic of all discussions and made headlines everywhere from New York Times to India Today.
In our label-obsessed upper-class society, one’s social status is judged by the price tag of one’s bag and unfortunately the trend is seeping out of social circles into life and style magazines and fashion blogs. “They are turning fashion into a bag business,” remarked Alber Elbaz, artistic director and head designer at French fashion house, Lanvin. The statement stands truer for Pakistan than anywhere where else, where newspapers and local glamour glossies are bombarded with oversized Louis Vuittons and Hermes Birkins.
Going by the profusion with which one gets to see these very expensive bags on women in the elite social circles of Karachi, Lahore and the likes, fashion seems to have come down to be all about these bags. There is very little coverage of high street and utilitarian side of the fashion; now it is all about the bag which comes at a price only a few can afford.
I am not defying the concept of luxury, but going by glossy magazine covers and scores of socialites gracing their pages, it seems as if one’s style quotient is measured solely on basis of how many ridiculously expensive yet extremely ordinary looking designer bags one owns. Even in the category of luxury goods, it’s the same old Chanel 2.55 and Birkin totes that are spotted in profusion with an occasional sighting of a Prada or a Givenchy tote — the point being that only the ones that are instantaneously recognisable and known for their heavy price tags are the ones one gets to see the entire Lahore carrying.
While, in the hindsight, the urge to acquire accessories and amenities that are associated with elitism and luxury can’t be termed as a truly unnatural obsession, the whole exercise has triggered a very unhealthy trend. Magazines and glossies have started dedicating full-page coverage to shed light on what’s the latest goody in town and whole bag spotting has become quite a toilsome parade — studied, pondered over and analysed in more detail than a complex algebraic hypothesis.
CEO Hello Pakistan Zahraa Saifullah, who is also an avid fashionista and a bag enthusiast, finds this obsession and the bag-spotting trend in magazines misleading. “I believe publications have a moral responsibility to set reasonable precedents and especially not to mislead younger audience that often looks up to these magazines for fashion-related tips and advice, says Saifullah.
“Unfortunately quite a few local magazines highlight the fact that Birkins, Kellys and Chanels are the ‘it’ bags to aspire to and ignore the reality that there are many more fashionable and reasonably priced items in the market. This is really unfortunate as it represses people from exploring their own style and fashion sense,” Zahra concludes.
Fashion, which was supposed to be all about personal style, a medium of self-expression and a portrayal of wearable art has become more of a means to show off one’s buying power. Pages that should be adorned with street-style and real fashion coverage are festooned with unfamiliar faces of socialites and their suitcase-sized Louis Vuittons.
Those who cannot afford to buy such bags often resort to buying their replicas. The obsession makes them prefer an LV duplicate priced between Rs10,000 to Rs15,000, over a bag from Maheen Hussain or Polly & Me for Rs8,000. The scramble to buy the Birkin has produced a segment in the society that feels that they must own ‘bagwati jee’ at any cost even if it means carrying a fake one.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 17th, 2013.
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Please.... ppl who own bags have the money to own them that’s y they own them, they are just not buying things by seeing fashion magazine they have a mind and they certainly do have the money to travel and since they travel they find good things and want to improve their lifestyle. Plus these ppl also have the money to buy Pakistani designer Pret bridal formals and lawn. Have we forgotten the multi million rupee business? Don’t we buy Pakistani designer clothes and jewelry? Earlier in times rich ppl used to invest in jewelry diamonds and all now it’s about bags watches and glasses what’s wrong in it? It’s at least better than hiding your precious belonging in the bank safe. It propaganda created in our society everything we take step toward improvement. When we buy expensive things we have a desire to make more money hence improving lifestyle and the economy. So please look forward on owning such bags since improved lifestyle will improve your income and your nation, it will also eventually change the class brackets and increase our middle class section and narrow the gaps in our society. Stop hating the rich try being one of them...
Please.... ppl who own bags have the money to own them, they are just not buying things by seeing fashion magazine they have a mind and they certainly do have the money to travel. Plus these ppl also have the money to buy Pakistan designer Pret bridal formals and lawn. It a propaganda created in our society everything we take step toward improvement. if we buy expensive thing we have a deserve to make more money hence improving lifestyle. so please look forward on owning such bags since improved lifestyle will improve your income and ur nation. Stop hating the rich try being one of them...
If people can afford to buy these bags why not. It's a baseless argument comparing fashion to people that live in poverty.
People who are willing to spend thousands of dollars on bags have enough in their bank accounts to spend on their likes AS WELL as donating to charity.
Just because YOU can't fathom spending that much, don't hate others that do.
@Nobody: While I agree with most of your comments this one is a bit preachy. A designer bag can be anything you want it to be, for some it would be a carrier that you through your daily essentials in, for some it could be a piece of art you wear on your arm, for others it can be something that sets you apart from others (ideally that should be your dazzling personality/intelligent mind but not everybody thinks that way), and for some it can just be what you need to feel 'complete' (the ultimate sheep of a consumer). The point is, people should be free to purchase what they can legally purchase without being judged. My only advice to people who shell out the moolah for foreign designer bags is that spend some money and support the local businesses/karigars here as well.
While I believe people are free to spend their own money however they wish Birkin has become the symbol for the nouveau riche more than anything else. With Kim Kardashian and the whole lot of trashy/reality tv 'celebrities' accessing the wait-listed designs, the once coveted label has gone to the dumps and now finally the local 'upper-class socialites' are catching onto it. I like the point the author is trying to make though, magazines should focus more on high street/accessible fashion put together creatively rather than focusing on unknown 'socialites' carrying designer bags usually in the most imaginative and inelegant way possible.
Recently, i was gifted a micheal kore signature bad worth PKR 40,000. For someone who didn't even know wat mk was till that date, the bag seemed expensive but learning the actual price of the bag PKR 40,000 sent me reeling. Probably, not the most expensive in the elite league of bags but still very steep. From that day, I have gotten around to noticing MK's. and sadly they are around to be seen.
Its strange how in a nation where the majority lives below the poverty line and finds it difficult to make ends meet, we can afford to spend soo recklessly. While a few of us are getting bags in this range of price, there are children who are sick and can't afford medicines even worth PKR 2000/-.Some would say that, they can't take responsibility for everyone else's problems - *theka nai le rakha sab ka. My question to all those remains - do you not feel guilty at all when ou trot with you hermes, birkin or Mk for that matter and ther is another person hardly having money for one days meal...have you attended to your responsiblity towards the down trodden? kia aap ne unke karz adda kia?
@Vajiha Atiq: Your view of the world is so narrow. I love fashion, but no one else is the authority on what I MUST have and to be honest, $10 grand and upwards on a single bag is a heinous waste and something that I would be annoyingly disappointed in myself for giving in and buying. I traveled and learned about the world's cultures with that money. Something far more fulfilling than showing the world how much money I have or buying a bag because people have told me it's something I HAVE to have. I'm hopeful you're a teenager or very young adult and will grow out of this phase. Cheers.
@Vajiha Atiq: and what authority says that ?
What a sorry state of pakistani aunties. Shame on them.why cant they spent thier wealth to do something for the society rather than just being big showoffs and create complexes in the middle class.
If you are a bag enthusiast, you absolutely have to own a Birkin, a Louis Vuitton and a Chanel. Do notice, there is no "but" in this sentence. That is it! Although I do love a Ferragamo, an NYC or a Keneth Cole bag, but not as much as a the holy trinity of bags.