8 Reasons Why I Don't Buy Exotic Luxury Handbags...🐍

2,676
0
Published 2024-07-02

All Comments (21)
  • @Kensieful
    Jess! You are killing me this week 😂 “Point 4: Some are ugly” 😂😂😂😂😂
  • @mrsjade30
    Exotic bags make me cringe 😢😂 that’s just me. But it’s nice to look at. Even with Chanel bags, and lambskin, I feel bad even wearing a baby lamb 🥺🤧
  • @maryjomichele
    I said this in my previous comment on the P9. Exotics are especially cruel and disgusting IMO.
  • @MayaKabat
    I heard recently from Caleb’s channel that Ralph Lauren raises crocodiles and only harvests the skins when the crocodiles die naturally. I like this approach if it’s true.
  • @mellissabluxury
    I love exotics, especially lizard ❤ However I only buy new so I can trace how the skin was sourced, where and how the animal was raised, and that the meat is also used for food. Reputable houses will have this information and the paper trail to support it. When raised in this manner I see no difference to leather/beef.
  • Hey Jess, you look like you're feeling better today ❤The first luxury bag I bought for myself was a chocolate brown croc purse (+25years ago) that I still use on an every day basis, although, as you mentioned, it's a pita for travel now, so it no longer flies with me. I don't remember when CITES started to be required but it wasn't always so. Unfortunately, i love exotics esp croc, lizard, stingray and karung and my heart is not getting the message to stop. Attitudes have def changed, I don't feel safe wearing my mink anymore so it just sits in my closet. Oddly, I try very hard to only buy meat from a butcher that sources 'happy meat' because i've been to factory farms for cows, pigs and chickens. I feel very inconsistent. it's a good discussion to have though, so i really enjoyed your video.
  • @w4768
    With calf and lamb etc it’s not a by-product but a co-product. The leather isn’t incidental and the leather is highly profitable. Ostrich on the other hand was a byproduct initially before becoming a co-product. Killing is killing. When I started buying leather after not buying it for around 10 years, I didn’t feel like buying cow leather was much different than buying any other animal’s leather. At the end of the day I feel like if we only buy what we will use and buy from regulated sources it doesn’t make a difference which animal it comes from.
  • @lauriw4895
    I agree with you, I am not into the exotics. I just don't think they are very pretty. Just a status statement.
  • @stevie9091
    Probably just me, but the ostrich leather creeps me out.
  • @IrisLA1
    Generally, crocodile skin bags weigh less than the same style in cow leather. I have a few large size croc bags and they don't weigh a ton like a leather bag would.
  • @seabreeze4559
    pretty sure Scott Disick skinned a gator alive in the reality show KUWTK and nobody said anything, I was horrified, then again his name does contain sick? he literally just went at it with a hunting knife like something from American Psycho
  • Great subject, Jessie. I personally have never liked the look of exotics as a whole. Crocodile, python or ostrich (even mock exotics) don’t appeal to me. The only exotic that I think is pretty is lizard but not all handbag designs look good in it. I feel the same way about animal print in clothing and furniture. If the print is abstract and not immediately recognizable, then I don’t mind it. I also don’t like the idea that animals are being killed just for their skin and not coming from the food industry. Thanks for sharing!
  • @SvDu-bb7rh
    I saw video about how in some regions pythons are invasive species and there are special rangers who’s job is to kill snakes. They don’t want to waste leather and produce something out of it. In this case I can understand. Anyway, sometimes even eating meat cringes me.
  • @AnUrbanGypsy
    Lizard looks beautiful in some colours and mink always looks gorgeous. I maybe would buy a lizard one but they take a bit more care and it’s not something I’d use often. The Picotin with croc handles is stunning though so I’d probably get that version of a Picotin if I wanted that bag.
  • @Robbie_LeMeow
    Hi Jess! I don't buy exotic leathers. I just can't do it. I do have something that is croc embossed, and lizard embossed. But I say nooooo to exotics for myself. I can't even buy calf or lambskin. If I refuse to eat veal, I can't buy his skin. I have never eaten lamb, so there's that. No baby lambie bags for me either. ❤
  • @Coopmatt
    That orange python bag is fierce, omg so nice. Rich Bee realness.
  • Polyurethane bags marketed as vegan/eco/sustainable make me cringe. Because they don't break down into the environment for an entire century. I really despise this marketing it's so rubbish. I do have preloved exotics but the bag is a lizard, and shoes and belts are ostrich skin. All are well worth it and wonderful bargains. I bought the shoes and belts new but the skin is leftover. The lizard bag is so old it's not affecting the market at all or participating in any abuse. Once I wore a [edit: borrowed] fox fur collar out and it was for a murder mystery night. Someone accosted me over the fur and even though I explained the fox was at least 50 years old and wearing it now was making no difference but she was rabid. People need to get a grip. My lizard is Deep Purple like the band. Smoke on the water!!!
  • @carrino15
    Some exotic leather actually could improve conditions for the animals and the environment if sourced at an ethical way. Let me explain. It cost money to take care of the environment these animals could live in, and without the income from these exotic leather the land would have become regular farm land and the animals gone extinct at that area as they are looked upon being dangerous and just a big cost for the locals.
  • @sams3015
    I think some can look nice but I don’t understand the fuss of ostrich, it makes me think of skin disease