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"Back To School" Can Be Expensive
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Classroom couture
Students clamoring for pricier clothing, accessories like their celebrity idols have

BY MAE ANDERSON The Associated Press

   NEW YORK — Before Claire Stern goes back to school as a high school senior this fall, she needs a new bookbag. But not just any bag will do.
   “I want a tote bag by Jaye Hersh that the celebrities are wearing; they’re called Market Bags,” said Stern, 17, who lives in Bronxville. “It’s more stylish than a backpack.”
   The bags retail for more than $100 if they’re monogrammed, and Stern has noticed actresses Reese Witherspoon and Jessica Alba wearing them.
   Shopping for back-to-school apparel is a late summer ritual. But as tweens and teens become increasingly savvy about fashion, they’re asking for luxury products, such as $200 designer handbags and $100-plus jeans.
   Industry trade group The International Council of Shopping Centers expects that back-to-school sales will grow 5 percent in 2007 to $27 billion.
   Mid-tier and discount retailers have been facing pressure this year as consumers cut down on extra expenses to compensate for rising gas prices and a sagging housing market. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. earlier this month cut prices on more than 16,000 items in a bid to turn around sales for the critical back-to-school season.
   Meanwhile, the luxury market is booming. Sales worldwide topped $150 billion last year.
   Teens are playing an increasing part in that, according to experts, as Web sites, tabloids and TV shows detailing celebrities and fashion make kids more aware of and demanding for luxury goods than ever before.
   “They’re prime candidates for luxury,” said Gerald Celente, publisher of Trends Journal, a newsletter that tracks a wide range of trends. “Their world is the entertainment world, and that’s what they’re focused into.”
   Jacqueline Nasser, ELLEgirl Fashion Market Editor, said teens take a cue from shows like “Laguna Beach,” “The O.C.,” “The Hills” and “My Super Sweet 16” that portray a certain lifestyle.
   “They have been surrounded by celebrities and TV programs where fashion is the central point,” she said. “They even have younger celebrities in the ads for designer labels — Scarlett Johansson for Louis Vuitton, Lindsay Lohan for Jill Stuart, etc.”
   Lydia Stover, 16, said she regularly studies celebrity magazines such as People for fashion inspiration and cites Nicole Richie as someone whose style she admires.
   Stover, who will be going into 11th grade at Kingston High School in Kingston, saved up $200 for a Coach bag and covets a Gaucho-style bag for fall.
   “Sometimes I’ll look at what celebrities are wearing and think ‘Oh, that’s a cute outfit’ and recreate it somehow,” she said.
   Amy Klaris, a branding specialist at consulting firm Kurt Salmon Associates, said that over the past year or two years, having a luxury item has become more important to teens.
   “There are so many icons out there right now for them,” Klaris said. “There’s more people they’re looking up to and wanting to emulate, and they can do that through accessories.”
   Where parents put their foot down depends on their income, said Klaris. And while a Prada wardrobe might be too much for a parent to handle, they might be more willing to spend on accessories, she said.
   “They want their kids to fit in,” she said. “They’re still buying T-shirts at Target but still having that [luxury] handbag.”
   Bloomingdale’s fashion director Stephanie Solomon said that this year, teen shoppers at the department stores nationwide are clamoring for $300 Chanel sunglasses, designer handbags by Marc Jacobs, Chanel and Chloe — which can cost between $900 and $1,250 — and $200 to $300 Tory Burch shoes.
   “It’s really about the accessories,” she said. “The fact that you can wear sunglasses every day and carry the same handbag every day justifies the expense.”
   Solomon said the recent surge in lowerpriced lines by designers — Marc by Marc Jacobs, for example, or Proenza Schouler for Target — helps teens afford designer fashion but has also made them aware of the higher-priced lines.
   “They’re a segue into the designer sectors,” she said.
   ELLEgirl’s Nasser also said accessories are the entry point for teens buying luxury items.
   “Handbags are huge,” she said. “They are definitely a status symbol. So whether it’s Marc Jacobs, Luis Vuitton, Yves St. Laurent or Chanel, girls will want the hot bags that they see all the celebrities carrying.”
   Jeans — the premium denim that has been popular for several years and costs between $100 and $300— are another popular choice.
   “Having the coolest label of denim is something that every girl desires,” Nasser said. “J Brand, Acne, Earnest Sewn, True Religion, Ksubi are all brands that will be big this year.”
   Katie Siembieda, 14, who will be a sophomore at Drake High School in Fairfax, Calif., said that while she likes to shop for back-to-school clothes at thrift stores and find bargains, she splurges on premium denim.
   For the fall, she wants a pair of True Religion or Lucky jeans, which retail for more than $100. She saved up her own money to get her previous pair of Lucky jeans.
   “They’re nice, but they’re very expensive,” she said.
   Celente, publisher of Trends Journal, said that while teens might not have fulltime jobs, they don’t have many expenses, either, so they spend all of their money on themselves.
   Youth research company Teenage Research Unlimited said teenagers between 12 and 19 years old spent $179 billion in 2006, or $102 per teen per week.
   “(Teens) don’t have mortgages to pay and they don’t have rent,” Celente said. “They have disposable income.”
   Stern, who has saved up her own money to buy $200 Tory Burch shoes and thinks $125 Ray Ban sunglasses will be popular this year, agreed.
   “Since I’m in high school and not really concerned about rent money, if I want to buy stuff for me with money I earn, it’s going to be something to do with fashion,” she said.
   Stern added that there is a limit to her back-to-school spending. Her parents would draw the line, for example, at an iPhone, which retails for about $600 — the total amount Stern predicts she’ll spend on back-to-school shopping.
   “Although it is cool and new, it is too much money and there are a few flaws in it,” she said. “I understand why my parents wouldn’t pay for it.”
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Shadow
August 6, 2007, 6:42am Report to Moderator
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You have to ask yourself why are the clothing, shoes and accessories so expensive when they're made in China for next to nothing.
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senders
August 6, 2007, 6:14pm Report to Moderator
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I'm all for uniforms.....too bad parents cant teach kids self control and the destructive powers of envy and covetousness--even if it is just "innocent idol worship"........


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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BIGK75
August 6, 2007, 8:17pm Report to Moderator
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I remember one year, because of a special math class I was taking, I had to buy a $75 calculator.  It probably ran about the price of the rest of the stuff I had to buy for school.
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bumblethru
August 8, 2007, 9:27pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from senders
I'm all for uniforms.....too bad parents cant teach kids self control and the destructive powers of envy and covetousness--even if it is just "innocent idol worship"........


Well, you just described their parents!!!!



When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche


“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.”
Adolph Hitler
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