Vivienne Westwood Plush Bear Bag

Vivienne Westwood Teddy Bag. By far, the hottest bag we’ve ever seen, and a very rare find. This large shoulder bag has everything from the beautiful eye-catching green color, a cute plush bear charm that matches the pink checkered lining fabric to the chic knots on the handle making it look like something straight out of FRUiTS magazine. Overall it has a legendary, very Vivienne Westwood-ish color palette of vivid green, many different shades of pink, and light beige. Furthermore, the bag is surprisingly spacious while maintaining the cutest look ever. Features an inside pocket, and comes with the original dust bag. From the 90s-00s.

4.000,00 kr. incl. VAT

Out of stock

Description

Vivienne Westwood Plush Bear Bag. By far the hottest bag we’ve ever seen, and a very rare find. This huge shoulder bag has everything from the beautiful eye-catching green color, a cute plush bear charm that matches the pink checkered lining fabric to the chic knots on the handle making it look like something straight out of FRUiTS magazine. Overall it has a legendary, very Vivienne Westwood-ish color palette of vivid green, many different shades of pink, and light beige. Furthermore, the Vivienne Westwood bag is surprisingly spacious while maintaining the cutest look ever. Features an inside pocket, and comes with the original dust bag. From the 90s-00s. The perfect match with our COMME des GARÇONS Striped Knit Sweater!

Measurements: Width 45cm / Height 23cm / Depth 22cm
Condition: Great – besides a small stain behind the crease on the right and a scratch on the imitated leather part. Feels very well maintained and fresh.
Material: Canvas, cotton lining & imitated leather
Brand information:
The UK in the 70s was notoriously shitty. Massive unemployment and working-class poverty were just a few of the problems that Britain could thank Margaret Thatcher for. From the socio-economic problems emerged various counter-cultures to the ruling Conservative class. Not just an important trend in music history, with highly influential bands like the Sex Pistols, The Clash, and The Damned, punk was an attitude against the system, the establishment, the conservatives, and the conformists. A key form of expression for punks was clothing. And since the UK is the birthplace of conservative bourgeois attire, historically foisted on children in the form of school uniforms, it’s the perfect place to rebel against suits, ties, and skirts. The punks reclaimed their personal clothing choices and, as fuel on the fire, the conservative class reacted very harshly to this. As Paula Reed described in her book “Fashion Revolution”, punk was not born on the shop floors, but rather on the streets where children and young delinquents would tear their shirts, wear bondage pants and platform shoes, and sometimes flip off the police or set fire to a garbage can. Vivienne Westwood became part of the punk scene when she met the Sex Pistols’ infamous manager Malcolm McLaren in the late 60s. Together they ran the punk hotspot, a clothing store called “SEX” on King’s Road in London from ’74. In the shop, Westwood and McLaren sold their own designs as well as fetish- and bondage wear from local and international designers. In ’76, “SEX” was renamed for the fourth or fifth time as “Seditionaries” and, with the backing of another King’s Road store called “BOY”, expanded their brand. This is, in our opinion, the most interesting time in Vivienne Westwood’s career which has given her the status of one of the most prominent European designers. Seditionaries’ designs included heavily distressed tops with provocative punk prints – such as the one where Mickey Mouse is seen doing heroin, or having missionary sex with Minnie Mouse and his ear is carved into an anarchist ‘A’. Other designs included the iconic gauze bondage ‘DESTROY’ tops that expressed rather important political statements. Later on in her career, Vivienne Westwood has moved to higher fashion, designing beautiful haute couture collections while always maintaining a focus on the statement and new perspectives on orthodox dogma.

Sizes:

Since a large portion of our garments are Japanese, the size you will see is almost always different from the marked size. In order to be as precise as possible, we have created a size chart more suitable for the average size range of our customers. We put a disclaimer in the product description of all garments where this applies. Navigate to the Size Chart in the footer menu.