Vendredi 15 avril 2011

Uptown Cheapskate Franchise - Vintage Clothing at What a Woman Wants Show


    Uptown Cheapskate knows just what women want – great fashions they can afford.  At the recent What a Woman Wants expo in Sandy, Utah, Uptown Cheapskate delighted women with their offering of name brand clothing at prices far below regular retail stores.   How do they do it?  Uptown Cheapskate buys clothing from women (and men) who aren’t using it any longer, and sells it to other women (and men) who want something new and fashionable.

    As attendees at the What a Woman Wants show discovered, Uptown Cheapskate stores offer a whole new world of resale shopping.  With over 1000 pairs of current style jeans in each store, including brands like True Religion, Laguna Beach, Miss Me, and Citizens for Humanity – they offer a huge selection and fit for women (and men) from size 0 to 18.  The walls are filled with handbags, purses, shirts, blouses, sweaters and jackets.  Customers can buy, sell and trade shoes, boots, designer handbags, coats, dresses, and even fashion jewelry.  Each store also supplements their used product offering with brand new items including clothing, accessories, and jewelry.

    Franchise President and Salt Lake store owner Scott Sloan might be an unlikely expert in what women want – but with 5 sisters, he has been surrounded by fashion conscious  women all his life.  “Women want to have clothes that look great and make them feel good.  That’s why Uptown Cheapskate has been so successful as a franchise company.  New outfits make women feel confident and fashionable – and that’s why they love to shop.  The things in their closet make be great fashion, but they don’t produce the “feel good” buzz that they did when they were brand new."

    Enter Uptown Cheapskate.  Women can trade in the clothes they’ve already worn, and exchange them for cash or other outfits that excite them today.  This fashion exchange system has produced highly successful franchisees in places like Greensboro, NC and Salisbury, MA as well as in Wichita, KA.

    Uptown Cheapskate Franchise is targeted to the young adult and teen resale store franchise market, but with fashion labels from stores like Ann Taylor, Anthropology, and J. Crew, it appeals to a much wider audience.  Moms come in to shop with their teenagers, and usually end up finding items they love too.  When it comes to what a woman wants, if it's fashion, Uptown Cheapskate will probably have it.

Par jeanssale - 2 commentaire(s)le 15 avril 2011
Jeudi 14 avril 2011

The ‘invisible religion’ of the grade-conscious

SO YOU think that student with lower mental abilities are the ones who usually cheat in school? You’re wrong! Researchers have suggested that students who have higher goals and experience higher pressure to succeed are more likely to cheat.Cheating in itself is a form of religion if one follows Kierkegaard’s definition of the “religious.” For cheating suspends the ethical demands of a student in the name of a higher “cause.”Of course, that’s a perverse rendering of Kierkegaard’s analysis of Abraham’s faith. But cheating is just the tip of the iceberg. For it is being grade-conscious that is the “true” religion.
If we define religion, in the manner of Paul Tillich, as “the state of being grasped by an ultimate concern, a concern which qualifies all other concerns as preliminary and which itself contains the answer to the question of a meaning of our life,” then, indeed being grade-conscious is a form of religion. (This is just the existentialist way of paraphrasing Matthew 6:21: “For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.”) Religion demands martyrdom. Students are willing to commit suicide because they would rather be dead than live a meaningless life with a grade point average lower than 95.

Like any religion, being grade-conscious has its doctrine: Grades are objective, and a teacher’s personality does not count for she is just an instrument for dispensing the sacrament of grades (Catholic doctrine of ex opere operato).

It has also its myths: Grades are the ticket to success, grades define one being, and they predict one’s income later. Next, rituals: Students collect their class cards, compute and compare it with others, and they are signed by parents.

Prayer is the most important element of ritual. Students offer supplications to their teachers and school administrators. Countless letters and appeals pile up in the principal’s office before graduation. Why? Because students believe that miracles can happen (who knows whether the graduation committee will allow a student to graduate with honors even if she has a grade of 3 in PE or if it will let a pregnant girl graduate with honors?).

Grades also have an experiential dimension, transforming the lives of students and making them competitive, aggressive and ever watchful of the behavior of their classmates and teachers. It affords them what Abraham Maslow calls the “peak experience” or ecstasy.

Grades can either be depressant or stimulant. But like any other entheogenic drugs that induce a religious high, they can become addictive as a stimulant. Their depressing effects usually lead students to detach themselves from the rat race of the academic jungle to avoid further pressures (the nominal or the ritualist students). The grade dependents or the “religious” however cannot live without the competition and the rewards.

Finally, grades have their own community dimension: families celebrate their children’s success, special gifts are given to students with honors, trophies and medals are dispensed sacramentally, and the “chosen ones” are recognized through elaborate rituals at the end of the school year.

All religions have an Apocalypse or stories about the end times. Students only find out about the true meaning of grades when they graduate and they are already working. They realize, quite painfully at first, that grades are not as important as the skills they have, the social networks they are connected to, and of course the kind of schools they went to. And yet, ironically, these same students who have gone to the other side, who have seen the obnoxious face of the promised “beatific vision” continue to indoctrinate their children into the “invisible religion” of their great ancestors. Thus, passing successfully the “memes” of the grade-conscious.

As a Marxist Christian educator, I have to struggle against this kind of idolatry that obliges students and teachers to embrace this false “invisible religion.” But as a Marxist, I see this “invisible religion” as a mere “imaginary flower” in the chain of contradictions that is generated by the primary contradictions in our society. Our competitive society is becoming more and more obsessed with being on top so that many young people are very willing to make the “leap of faith” to any religion that can promise them “cheap grace”!

Happy graduation to all the believers!
Par jeanssale - 2 commentaire(s)le 14 avril 2011
Mercredi 13 avril 2011

Calling All Woodinville Savvy Shoppers: Bellevue Goodwill To Hold Designer Label Sale

WHAT:  Bellevue Goodwill's Designer Label Sale, to benefit Goodwill's free job training and education programs.  WHEN:  Friday, April 29 and Saturday, April 30; Hours: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. both days WHERE:  Bellevue Goodwill, 14515 NE 20th St.  
OF INTEREST:

    This year's sale, in its second year, will be twice as big, with more than 10,000 designer jackets, coats, shirts, dresses, shoes, handbags, accessories and more at affordable prices, on an expanded sales floor.
    New this year, the sale will have designer label kids clothing, as well as some doggie designer bags. A nice selection of vintage clothing has also been added.
    Shoppers can find a great selection no matter when they visit; Goodwill staff will restock the shelves with more designer clothes throughout both days of the sale.
    The sale will have a who's who of designer brands, including: Jeans by Seven for all Mankind, True Religion, Citizen, Rock & Republic, Hudson and more; Shoes by Manolo Blahnik, Ugg, Jimmy Choo, and others; clothing by Marc Jacobs, Tory Burch, Ella Moss, Ferragamo, Ellen Tracy, Prada, and many more brands, as well as handbags by Coach, Gucci and other designers.
    Men will find a great selection of items, including suits by Armani and Versace and casual wear by designers like Tommy Bahama, Ben Sherman, Faconnable, Duchamp, Helly Hansen, Ted Baker, Lacoste and more. There will be jeans, shoes, belts, wallets and more, in addition to suits, pants and shirts.
    People who shop the sale will be supporting a charitable cause. The net proceeds from the sale will benefit Goodwill's free job training and education programs, offered at nine centers around the region, including in Bellevue. These include classes in English for Speakers of Other Languages, Basic Computers, GED Preparation, Retail and Customer Service, and more, which help low-income and disadvantaged people in the community find jobs and become economically self-sufficient.

Par jeanssale - 0 commentaire(s)le 13 avril 2011
Mardi 12 avril 2011

Seizures of fake goods are up at ports

The massive Long Beach warehouse is as well stocked as any big-box discount store, filled with brand-new electronics, designer jeans, famous-label handbags and toys.

And cigarettes. Cartons and cartons of them, seemingly enough to supply a small kingdom.

There are no shoppers, however. All of the goods in this 500,000-square-foot warehouse were seized by federal agents - mostly counterfeits, along with banned items such as elephant ivory and drug paraphernalia.

Smuggling is on the rise, with seizures by U.S. Customs and Border Protection up 35 percent in fiscal year 2010 from 2009. And the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach are the front line.

The twin ports account for about 40 percent of all seizures by Customs and Border Protection. That reflects their status as the nation's busiest port complex and as the main cargo gateway from Asia, whose workshops are as good at making knockoffs as they are at making the real thing.

Customs officials acknowledge that they are struggling to intercept the vast quantities of illegal goods that make their way into the ports each day, hidden among legitimate shipments of clothing, auto parts and housewares.

Thanks to technological advances such as sophisticated 3-D printers, counterfeiting iPhones, PlayStation game consoles and other goods has never been easier. Selling them has gotten easier too, as the advent of online markets such as Craigslist and eBay has allowed smugglers to bypass fences in the criminal underworld and sell directly to consumers.

Apprehending contraband shipments, meanwhile, has never been harder. About 50,000 cargo containers a day, laden with $1 billion in goods, move through the local ports' 15,300 acres of channels, wharves and terminals. Each 40-foot container is large enough to carry about 12,300 shoeboxes, 20,000 toy dolls or 6,600 dresses on hangers.

Smugglers also have gotten wiser, mixing in their wares with legitimate shipments to make detection more difficult.

"We're not seeing containers that are just filled with contraband like we used to. We're seizing smaller amounts, but we're finding it more often," said Todd Hoffman, the Customs and Border Protection director at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

In January, for instance, Customs and Border Protection officials seized 22,000 cartons of counterfeit Marlboro Light 100s and Marlboro Gold cigarettes, worth $1.1 million, that were found alongside legitimate cargo in a container with a shipping invoice that read "hang tags and hang plugs."

Authorities also have found knockoffs of True Religion and other designer jeans that had distinctively stitched pockets concealed by innocuous denim patches, or cases in which cheap handbags covered counterfeits of expensive Kate Spades and Louis Vuittons, customs officer Guillermina Escobar said.

After smugglers get their hands on the counterfeit products, they remove the disguises and sell the goods as the real thing.

"They have even begun sending the fake bags and wallets and other items separately by sea cargo containers, and sending the fake logos and decals by air freight so that they can be attached to the counterfeits later," Escobar said.

Investigators in January raided several discount stores in downtown Los Angeles, where they snared more than $10 million worth of bogus iPods and other counterfeit and stolen merchandise. The fakes arrived through the harbor as parts meant to be reassembled and labeled before being sold, said Ron Boyd, chief of the Los Angeles Port Police's 200-member force.

To intercept illegal goods, customs officials rely on both electronic scans of containers as well as physical inspections, in which they crack open containers and poke around inside. Now and then, they get lucky with a tip from an informant.

Detection efforts at all seaports, airports and border crossings were stepped up after the 9/11 terror attacks, as authorities sought primarily to prevent weapons and explosives from entering the country. As an outgrowth, they began finding more counterfeit consumer goods as well.

At the L.A. and Long Beach ports, all containers are screened with mobile scanners or pass-through machines resembling giant metal detectors, which test for radiation that might indicate the presence of explosives - or lately, problematic cargo from Japan. The machines are sensitive enough to register a false positive from something as innocuous as cat litter.

Through Customs and Border Protection's Container Security Initiative, high-risk boxes are scanned overseas, before they depart for the U.S. Currently, 58 of the world's largest seaports have agreed to allow those inspections and 95% of all high-risk shipments are being scanned at those ports, said Jaime Ruiz, a spokesman for Customs and Border Protection in Southern California.

After arriving in the U.S., 5 percent to 10 percent of containers are physically inspected for smuggled goods or other things that don't belong, according to a customs investigator who didn't want to be identified because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly.

Several factors contribute to the decision to open a container for inspection, including the country from which the cargo originates, shipping manifests that arouse suspicions and whether the importer has certified its foreign suppliers through a federal program, as Target Corp. has done.

The U.S. government says it is pushing companies to join this Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism, which requires major U.S. importers to lean on their foreign suppliers to ensure that nothing illegal or dangerous is slipped in with their cargo. More than 10,000 companies have joined.

At the local ports, containers are taken for inspection to Customs and Border Protection's Long Beach warehouse, where on a recent day nearly 90 boxes were being unloaded. The merchandise warehouse is one of several run by the agency at the ports; others handle items such as food, refrigerated products, drugs and weapons.

Along with counterfeits, the warehouse also stores legitimate products with phony lab test stickers, which could pose a safety risk to U.S. consumers, and banned items such as elephant ivory and whale teeth. The warehouse has also held items that violated export controls and were confiscated on their way out of the U.S., such as high-performance analog-to-digital converters and equipment to manufacture assault rifles.

Smuggling of foreign-made counterfeit cigarettes into the United States has become such a problem that legitimate manufacturers are stepping up their own sleuthing.

Philip Morris USA Inc. sends plainclothes investigators to stores to buy and test cigarettes for authenticity, spokesman David Sutton said. The investigators also sift through discarded packs for clues, even digging through the trash at sports events.

The company recently sued dozens of businesses in Southern California and China for allegedly selling counterfeit Marlboro, Parliament and Virginia Slims cigarettes in stores and online.

"For the average consumer, it would be virtually impossible to tell the difference between an authentic pack and a counterfeit pack of cigarettes," Sutton said. "And every 40-foot container of counterfeits represents a loss of $350,000 in state and federal excise taxes.

Nearly all counterfeit and contraband items are destroyed by outside contractors under federal government supervision. Counterfeit cigarettes, for example, are burned in high-heat incinerators or crushed, Ruiz said.

Perhaps to the dismay of aficionados, confiscated Cuban cigars meet the same fate.

There are exceptions. If brand-owning businesses give permission, seized items can be donated to help the needy in other countries.

"We can't run the risk of those items being sold back into the U.S. market, so they have to be moved overseas," Ruiz said.

A recently seized shipment of several thousand pencils with fake National Football League team logos will find its way into classrooms in Africa through World Vision Africa.

"There could be a classroom full of Dallas Cowboy fans there soon," Ruiz quipped, "although they might not realize it."

Par jeanssale - 0 commentaire(s)le 12 avril 2011
Lundi 11 avril 2011

Spring 2011 Fashion: Teen Casualwear


In addition to gorgeous prom dresses, both Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue in Plaza Frontenac have great casualwear for teens that picks up on the spring 2011 trends.The '70s Are Back
This spring, teens can be seen wearing styles similar to what their mothers might've worn in the 1970s. From wide-leg pants and bohemian tops to long, flowing maxi dresses, a '70s-style casual look is definitely in right now. The spring 2011 colors - blue, coral and white - also are popular shades for these styles.

At Saks, Aly Tegethoff, a 17-year-old junior at St. Joseph's Academy, modeled two outfits that incorporated wide-leg pants. The first look included a pair of 7 For All Mankind wide-leg jeans ($178) and a white Patterson J. Kincaid blouse ($128). The second look had Tegethoff in navy blue wide-leg pants ($270) and a coral and white top ($275), both by Alice and Olivia.

Also at Saks, Courtney Brooks, a 16-year-old junior at St. Joe's, and Tierney Spence, a 17-year-old junior at Villa Duchesne, wore long dresses in styles reminiscent of the '70s. Brooks wore a coral T-Bags Los Angeles maxi dress ($195), while Spence wore a more Grecian-style blue Theory dress ($375), which looked great when paired with a Marc Jacobs scarf ($178) in her hair and a Streets Ahead belt ($265).

Smell the Roses

Beautiful floral prints are also popular for spring, whether it's on a shirt, a skirt or a dress. At Neiman Marcus, they have a great long, floral-printed Joie dress ($358, modeled by Tegethoff) that combines the '70s trend with this one.

Also at Neiman Marcus, Spence modeled a cute navy, red, white and yellow floral-printed Alice and Olivia skirt ($176) that looked great when paired with an off-the-shoulders navy blue Theory top ($95).

At Saks, Brooks modeled a great Leifsdottir short dress ($328) that, while it doesn't have a literal floral pattern, is very painterly and the mix of the colors green, purple, yellow and white make it feel floral-inspired and perfect for spring.

White-Washed

White jeans are definitely in this season, but if you don't like wearing full jeans on the warmer days that spring brings your way, there are plenty of pairs of white capris and shorts available at area stores.

White jeans, capris and shorts look great when paired with a floral-printed top. At Neiman Marcus, Brooks modeled a sleeveless navy floral-printed Rebecca Taylor top ($215) with white 7 For All Mankind jeans ($149), while Tegethoff modeled a three-quarter-sleeved light blue floral-printed Alice and Olivia bohemian-style top ($154) with white Fifteen Twenty shorts ($187).

Aside from the floral prints, pretty much any brightly-colored top will look good with white pants. At Saks, Spence modeled a great multi-colored striped Splendid top ($64) with white True Religion capris ($196).

All-white outfits are also popular looks for the warmer months. At Neiman Marcus, Brooks modeled the white 7 For All Mankind jeans with a great Trina Turk sleeveless white top ($238).

If the all-white look or white pants don't appeal to you, pairing a great white jacket or blazer with a vibrantly-colored dress is a great look for spring. At Neiman Marcus, Spence modeled an Elizabeth and James white jacket ($395) with a sleeveless coral Rebecca Taylor dress ($345).

Be sure to check out our photo gallery for pictures of Brooks, Spence and Tegethoff modeling the clothing mentioned in this article, and also check out the behind-the-scenes video, in which each girl shares her favorite spring fashion trends.
Par jeanssale - 0 commentaire(s)le 11 avril 2011
Vendredi 08 avril 2011

Los Angeles and Long Beach ports are on the front lines of a crackdown on counterfeit goods



The massive Long Beach warehouse is as well stocked as any big-box discount store, filled with brand-new electronics, designer jeans, famous-label handbags and toys.

And cigarettes. Cartons and cartons of them, seemingly enough to supply a small kingdom.

There are no shoppers, however. All of the goods in this 500,000-square-foot warehouse were seized by federal agents — mostly counterfeits, along with banned items such as elephant ivory and drug paraphernalia.

Smuggling is on the rise, with seizures by U.S. Customs and Border Protection up 35% in fiscal year 2010 from 2009. And the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach are the front line.

The twin ports account for about 40% of all seizures by Customs and Border Protection. That reflects their status as the nation's busiest port complex and as the main cargo gateway from Asia, whose workshops are as good at making knockoffs as they are at making the real thing.

Customs officials acknowledge that they are struggling to intercept the vast quantities of illegal goods that make their way into the ports each day, hidden among legitimate shipments of clothing, auto parts and housewares.

Thanks to technological advances such as sophisticated 3-D printers, counterfeiting iPhones, PlayStation game consoles and other goods has never been easier. Selling them has gotten easier too, as the advent of online markets such as Craigslist and EBay has allowed smugglers to bypass fences in the criminal underworld and sell directly to consumers.

Apprehending contraband shipments, meanwhile, has never been harder. About 50,000 cargo containers a day, laden with $1 billion in goods, move through the local ports' 15,300 acres of channels, wharves and terminals. Each 40-foot container is large enough to carry about 12,300 shoeboxes, 20,000 toy dolls or 6,600 dresses on hangers.

Smugglers also have gotten wiser, mixing in their wares with legitimate shipments to make detection more difficult.

"We're not seeing containers that are just filled with contraband like we used to. We're seizing smaller amounts, but we're finding it more often," said Todd Hoffman, the Customs and Border Protection director at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

In January, for instance, Customs and Border Protection officials seized 22,000 cartons of counterfeit Marlboro Light 100s and Marlboro Gold cigarettes, worth $1.1 million, that were found alongside legitimate cargo in a container with a shipping invoice that read "hang tags and hang plugs."

Authorities also have found knockoffs of True Religion and other designer jeans that had distinctively stitched pockets concealed by innocuous denim patches, or cases in which cheap handbags covered counterfeits of expensive Kate Spades and Louis Vuittons, customs officer Guillermina Escobar said.

After smugglers get their hands on the counterfeit products, they remove the disguises and sell the goods as the real thing.

"They have even begun sending the fake bags and wallets and other items separately by sea cargo containers, and sending the fake logos and decals by air freight so that they can be attached to the counterfeits later," Escobar said.

Investigators in January raided several discount stores in downtown Los Angeles, where they snared more than $10 million worth of bogus iPods and other counterfeit and stolen merchandise. The fakes arrived through the harbor as parts meant to be reassembled and labeled before being sold, said Ron Boyd, chief of the Los Angeles Port Police's 200-member force.

To intercept illegal goods, customs officials rely on both electronic scans of containers as well as physical inspections, in which they crack open containers and poke around inside. Now and then, they get lucky with a tip from an informant.

Detection efforts at all seaports, airports and border crossings were stepped up after the 9/11 terror attacks, as authorities sought primarily to prevent weapons and explosives from entering the country. As an outgrowth, they began finding more counterfeit consumer goods as well.

At the L.A. and Long Beach ports, all containers are screened with mobile scanners or pass-through machines resembling giant metal detectors, which test for radiation that might indicate the presence of explosives — or lately, problematic cargo from Japan. The machines are sensitive enough to register a false positive from something as innocuous as cat litter.

Through Customs and Border Protection's Container Security Initiative, high-risk boxes are scanned overseas, before they depart for the U.S. Currently, 58 of the world's largest seaports have agreed to allow those inspections and 95% of all high-risk shipments are being scanned at those ports, said Jaime Ruiz, a spokesman for Customs and Border Protection in Southern California.

After arriving in the U.S., 5% to 10% of containers are physically inspected for smuggled goods or other things that don't belong, according to a customs investigator who didn't want to be identified because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly.
Par jeanssale - 0 commentaire(s)le 08 avril 2011
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