the bracelet had cut up in two
Salvatore Ferragamo Purses When I began thrifting and scrounging my way to some semblance of personal fashion, there was nonetheless something shameful about admitting that your clothes had a past, unknowable-to-you life. I’ve spent a decade and a half overlaying trend (I’m Elle’s fashion features director now), and over that time I’ve seen the business awakening to sustainability and reuse. Luxury manufacturers that when destroyed and even burned unsold merchandise are now considering of ways to reinvent it. When some have so little and others are drowning in a surfeit of options, the flaunting of abundance — so long the central driver of our screen-based existence — starts to feel like unhealthy manners. Erin Kleinberg is a little bit of a wunderkind of the fashion trade. After founding online fashion magazine Coveteur, she started her own artistic company, Métier Creative, working to create magic with manufacturers like Chanel and Ferragamo. In the uncommon event if an item is pu