Paul Smith Laptop Bag
Posted on 29. Apr, 2009 by Moral Fibre Press Office in Fashion
Moral Fibre presents you the”Paul Smith ‘letter board’ printed laptop case finished with chocolate coloured
leather trims.” With internal linining in purple canvas you’d be the envy of all the nu – rave scene kids, but you’d still have the respect of fashionable geeks the world over.
SThe bag is roughly the size of a large laptop, it bloody better be it’s a laptop bag after all. It’s styled with letters which appear pasted to its exterior, held together by yarn wrapped tight. You sense the artistic paradox, the dichotomy betwixt the old world bag and its functional purpose. Oh the genius…
Nevertheless the bag rocks – just a pity Paul Smith thinks it ok to make his wares in China.
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What’s your beef with products made in China? They certainly beat anything produced locally. I’ve purchased most of my clothes overseas because SA quality is so poor, and much of it is put together in China.
Sure, most of the cheapest shit is also made in China, but the brand-name stuff is fine.
That bag looks like it was on sale at the Glastonbury Festival next to the Celtic Moonboots.
The new international brand jimm choo bags,coach handbags,LV handbags, can you miss it?
http://www.webbagsite.com
I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I don’t know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading.
Hi Graham, good to see you’ve arrived on Moral Fibre. Welcome.
“They” are generally malnourished, under paid and subject to the whims of producers who simply wish to enrich themselves whilst taking advantage of lax laws governing minimum wage work in China.
You could very well ask, “do you wear Levis, nike” etc. etc. and I’d unfortunately have to reply “yes I do”. However Paul Smith is a British made brand, a brand which ought to be made by the thousands of impoverished Britians, particularly in light of the recession.
You know I tend to disagree with you about the SA made products, we pay a premium for our stringent labour law which enforces a “liveable” minimum wage payment scheme on our textile industry. Furthermore our national textile distributers are nailed purely because of the assumption that the cheaper Chinese made cotton products are “better”, local producers simply cannot produce on the same scale as the Chinese, nor can they do so cheaply.
I guess that’s my beef. Not a huge deal, but a pain in the ass nonetheless.