2011年8月5日星期五

Fashion Knockoffs

I'd articulate Sir   Fashion Knockoffs    Francis Drake embodies in spades on duty top right now. He assumed a sneak a a few months ago that is unknown amongst about celeb sneakerheads, the Air Jordan 8 Ray Allen Edition. Only 24 pairs of those were made, and they handbags knockoffs  were released to the public via House of Hoops in Harlem, New York, in 2008. That shoe really won me over for many reasons: There was no release date, and it is impossible to find at this point. If made useable, it canful potentially fetch $5,000 to $7,000, depending during the size.
Jon Zobel has a hot business going, flipping hip-hop-inspired, limited-edition sneakers, hats and watches to like-minded collectors for wads of cash.At 13, he's part of a "sneakerhead" trend that began in the 1980s with the rise of hip-hop culture and has trickled down to teens who hoard birthday money and holiday checks to buy pricey footwear with a cult-like following.(Julie Landry Laviolette/Miami Herald) - A portion of Jon Zobel's sneaker collection, at his home in Plantation, Fla. He buys them online through eBay and other sites, or through events called Dunkxchanges. (MCT)
   replica Louis Vuitton I really like the way they look, and I like them because I make a lot of money selling them," he sayson bought his first pair of kicks with money he made washing cars when he was 12. He became hooked on the hobby, finding a unique pair, then marking it up and reselling it via Facebook or eBay. Craigslist and Web sites like solecollector.com are also big marketplaces for shoes.
Jon was able to boost his inventory in November with $500 of his bar mitzvah money,said his mom, Julie Zobel-Talenfeld, a public-relations executive.
"He is such a wheeler-dealer. He took that $500 and turned it into $2,000," Zobel-Talenfeld says. "He used that to buy a Harley-Davidson golf cart that was worth $6,000."
Jon's most expensive pair, a "What the dunks" released in 2007 by Nike, is a compilation of every skateboard shoe Nike every
  made and has a street value of more than $1,000.
His mom says he spends hours meticulously detailing his collection, using special soap to clean the laces and bleach to whiten the midsoles. One pair is shrink-wrapped to prevent yellowing.
Jon says he sells about 90 percent of his stock, reserving special pairs as collector items. He wears some shoes, carefully using a heel-to-toe gait so he doesn't scuff the bottoms.
"He becomes all out," how-do-you-dos mom alleged. "If he gets in something, he doesn't just break 100 percentage, he caves in 250 percent."

没有评论:

发表评论