10 Unforgetable Handbags in Louis Vuitton History
Louis Vuitton is an old and traditional brand making travel suitcases for noble person and loyalties for more than 150 years. Now it plays the leading role in fashionable leather products circle. The day before the releasing of new pattern LV handbags is just when trend-spotters waiting outside LV franchise stores day and night. From 1854 to now, Louis Vuitton has always held the travel concept of pursuing delicate ,top-quality and comfort sensation in esteem. It also designs all the patterns based on that. The travel products,handbags as well as accessaries manifested the excellent modern fashion consisitently.
In the long history of Louis Vuitton development, there are so many classic patterns of Louis Vuitton handbags beloved by customers and Louis Vuitton zealot. Today we selected ten unforgetable Louis Vuitton Speedy handbags in its history and we would like to show and review their excellent charm and delicate sensation together with you.

Speedy 25 designed by Audrey Hepburn in 1965

Classic Monogram Canvas Speedy

Monogram Cerises Speedy coworked with Takashi Murakami in 2004

Damier Azur Speed in 2006

Normade Speedy in 2006

Silver Japanned Leather Speedy IN 2006

Monogram Watercolor Series Speedy 35

Monogramouflage Speedy by Takashi Murakami

Monogram Roses Speedy in Honour of Stephen Sprouse

Monogram Graffiti Speedy 053 in Honour of Stephen Sprouse
Fashion Week Handbags: Louis Vuitton Fall 2011

It’s been a full month since all of the fashion week festivities started, and they’ve finally come to an end. Showing at the very end of the cycle can either be a blessing or a curse; if what you’ve put together is merely mediocre (or worse, if it’s flat-out bad), critics and buyers are more likely to look harshly on it because of our fatigue at four weeks worth of clothes and accessories. If the collection you’re presenting is as good as beautifully fetishistic Louis Vuitton Fall 2011, though, then you get the glorious distinction of closing out the season on a high note and having your clothes by foremost in the minds of editors.
Vuitton is not a handbag company that I normally look to for my own purchases because of my personal preference toward bags without logos, but its fall accessory offerings were easily some of the best of the entire season. The central idea of the handbag collection was a theme and variations starring the brand’s ever-popular Lockit shape, much like the Speedy iterations that we saw from Vuitton for Fall 2010. It’s an idea that worked well then and works well now, with the disciplined lines of the Lockit lending themselves seamlessly to the upscale kink of the Vuitton ready-to-wear. Let’s not talk about the fuzzy bags and pretend those never happened, ok? Everything else was too good of a distraction.







