![]() ![]() I knew this was a pretty thorough article when I wrote it back in July, 2019, and it was so well received that other sites republished my information several months later. ![]() I think a good place to start is to revisit my very first Hermès article for PurseBlog, “ Is Your Hermès Birkin or Kelly Truly an Investment?”, in which I delineated a list of Investment Factors one should consider when evaluating a bag purchase from an (admittedly unidealistic, but definitely practical) investment perspective. So I can’t tell you to buy Parme, or Rose Indienne, or any number of colors that are not being offered right now as a, ahem, “good investment”, although their scarcity does indeed make those colors good investments, even if retrospectively so. Given the opportunity, I would buy a Birkin or Kelly of almost any size and leather in the color Parme, but unfortunately Parme hasn’t been produced by Hermès in at least 15 years (and so I cry). Further, the bags we buy are from a rather limited pool of what is being manufactured and what is being made available at the time of purchase. I thought this was a good topic to tackle, not necessarily as a list or a specific set of answers, but more as an exploration of why this might be a popular request and how any answer could even be definitive.Īfter all, there are a number of very loose components involved the bags we buy are, of course, what we individually are attracted to, and what we are attracted to is completely subjective. One request (a variation on a request I get fairly regularly) was “bag colors that are good for investment”. A few weeks ago I posed a question on my Instagram stories asking what you would like me to write about I’m always happy to write about the latest and greatest, or whatever topic pops into my head, but most importantly, I want to write articles that you want to read.
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