Showing posts with label luxury. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luxury. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

What is Luxury? Town & Country: Luxe is a Moving Target

What is luxury: time, money, big houses, or fancy stuff? In the age of frugal living, globalization and online shopping, the definition of luxury has radically changed. I have my own ideas about luxury (see below) but I was intrigued by the Town & Country special issue on luxe living.

The January 2008 Editor's Letter by Pamela Fiori provides an excellent overview of the topic. Here's a summary with a few of my comments thrown in:

How Luxury Has Changed:
  • Less exclusivity: "The luxury industry is no longer the small, exclusive club of a few-well established brands, most of them French or Italian." -- Pamela Fiori/T&C **Frugal Translation: Don't be a slave to expensive labels or expensive marketing campaigns.
  • Production shifts: The world of luxury no longer means hand-made items in limited supply. **Frugal Translation: Merchandise does not have to be scarce, expensive or heavily hyped to be luxurious. Define luxury in your own terms.
  • New demographics/flea market finds: Old-school T&C luxury couple -- White married couple in formal clothing in a period room decorated with Old Masters paintings and formal family portraits. New-age T&C luxury couple: "[Not] necessarily white, married or even heterosexual." This couple appears in T&C dressed in casual clothing and vintage jewelry, in a home filled with eclectic furniture (including flea market finds and custom-built items) and digital art. **Frugal Translation: Luxury is being comfortable with who you really are and where you really live. Flea market finds are just as good as high-end labels.
  • The wannabe market & the ripoffs: Global production and online shopping have created an unusual playing field in the luxury market. Smaller and mid-ranged players have more clout and produce genuine quality merchandise. But the rip-offs and the me-too players are also out there: "Other lower-level enterprises just want easy entry and are making the claim of being luxury when they really aren't." --T&C **Frugal Translation: Watch your back. Watch out for fakes. Don't overpay. It's all made in China anyway.

Non-Material Definitions of Luxury:

Luxury is not just about stuff. Here are some of the other perks mentioned by T&C
  • quality time
  • privacy
  • space
  • a good haircut
  • spa dates
  • manicures, etc.
My Definition of Luxury/My Wish List
  • Vacations without work, email or computer. (It would feel almost decadent to go on a vacation and not work for even an hour. Note: I understand that I am very fortunate to have work.)
  • More time with my family, including my parents, siblings and extended family.
  • Long walks every day.
  • More beach days.
  • Professional help with housework.
  • A cone of ice cream (at least once a week).
  • More sleep.
  • A quarterly spa date tune-up.
  • Extra time to write fiction.
  • A monthly museum date.
  • Time to donate hours to my children's schools.
  • An elegant restaurant meal.
  • A weekend stay at a four- or five-star hotel.
  • Season tickets for the Miami Heat.
  • Personal yoga trainer.
  • Health insurance. (That's a real luxury!)

Bottom Line: My definition of luxury primarily involves having the time, energy & money to fully enjoy my family without worrying about the next paycheck, bills or work. It's also a luxury to have time to relax. But as I look at my list, I realize that I can tap into some of those luxuries at any time. I just have to jump off of the treadmill of worry. Luxury is not all about the money; it's my attitude also.

Previous Posts:

Reformed Spenders Provide 10 Ways to Save in 2008
Barking Dogs, Stinking Turtles and Sick Hamsters Taught Me About Money
Cheap Travel Guide: Month-by-Month, City-by-City Hotel Savings Rates
Be Smart about Face Time & Other Tips for Building Job Security
~~~~
Sharon Harvey Rosenberg is the author of The Frugal Duchess of South Beach: How to Live Well and Save Money... Anywhere!, which will be published in the Spring of 2008 by DPL Press.

______________

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

What's More Than a Hummer, Beemer or Mercedes? Why We Ditched Our Old Car


The Repair-or-Replace Matrix for our old mini-van was off the track! I crunched the numbers: We could have been driving around in a Hummer, Beemer ( see photo) or Mercedes based on our 12-month auto repair bill.
Our so-called frugal repairs on our paid-for car were more than the lease bill for a luxury vehicle. So after a recent fender-bender, we ditched our old car and purchased a replacement: a later model mini-van in excellent condition!
Here are the numbers: In the last 12 months, we've faced a steady money leak, with a total repair bill of $3,500. That figure is very conservative and does not include smaller repairs. After each big-ticket repair, we figured: This is the fix that will keep this car running forever. Ha!

We were delusional. We were penny smart and pound foolish. I visited LeaseTrader.com (just to get prices) and here's what we could have snapped up for $291 a month, which is the conservative cost of our repairs.
2006 Chevrolet Malibu SS : $191 per month
2006 BMW 325i Sedan: $266 per month
2005 Mini Cooper S Styles Convertible: $271 per month
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 4WD: $279 per month
2006 Hummer H3 Sport Series: $282 per month.
2005 Mercedes CLK320 Coupe: $299
And there were other tempting deals. But the bottom line: At a certain point, the repair-reward matrix of old cars no longer makes sense.
For tomorrow, I plan to post a piece based on a Consumer Reports-affiliated report about when to replace and when to repair an old car.
___________
Recent Posts

Today:

Friday, June 15, 2007

Who Buys $700,000 Pens & $40,0000 Purses?


Forget the $500 Manolo Blahnik pumps. Those triple-digit shoes may be old-school. Luxury has new and higher prices, according to this report from Associated Press.

Members of the high-ticket, in-crowd are now wearing:

$1,000 shoes (up from $350 to $600)
$5,000 to $40,000 purses (up from $600)
$700,000 pens from Montblanc.

"Whether it's a handbag, shoe, or watch, the price of keeping up has gone up," said Kelly Bensimon, founding editor of Elle Accessories in an AP report.


The wild prices and the very conspicuous consumption reflect the widening gap between the wealthy (annual salary over $350,000) and the rest of us. That gap has grown to the widest levels since the Depression, according to some market experts.


But I don't buy that explanation. Some of the wealthiest people I know are very, very frugal shoppers. They're very generous, but they don't waste money. So who is buying all of that big-ticket merchandise, where sales and prices have been popping higher?

_____________

The Frugal Duchess Booktique
The Frugal Duchess of Beauty Store

Book Shop of Fear
The Poetry & Drama Queen
Frugal Jazz & Blues
Frugal Comic Book Connection
__