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Louis Vuitton x Murakami Superflat Panda Pochette Accessoires 20th Anniversary 2025 review and comparison with Yayoi Kusama Gaston Wearable Wallet 2023. Walk through. Thoughts. Review. - NOTE: The Superflat Panda patch might not smell like leather, IF it is leather, because the leather is chrome tanned, and not vegetable tanned. BUT. Due to lack of signs and traces of grains and pores, accompanied by a product description which only specified leather as material for trimmings, and not its exterior, (although you can define a patch as a trim), I do NOT believe these Superflat panda patches on these bags are made of leather. - The fact that their 20th anniversary collection fell not on the 20th anniversary year but after seem to me to reflect Louis Vuitton’s increasingly imprecise approach to marketing. The beginning of the end of luxury started with Berard Arnault takeover of LVMH more than 20 years ago, and started to lose its luster soon after in the early 2000s. By 2010s no major design houses, other than Miu Miu, have their namesake even remotely still involved in the designs they produced. I left the scene around 2011 and when I came back in 2024 I realised that the 2020s have put the final nail in the luxury coffin. From my perspective, the biggest offender in this decimation is Louis Vuitton. The LV in LVMH. The way the Murakami collection has been rolled out so far, seems to have confirmed my hypothesis. For an unreasonable amount of money, Louis Vuitton deserves nothing less than an unreasonable level of scrutiny. LV is currently made in France, Spain, and Italy. With parts apparently made in the USA, California and Texas to be precise. This one is made in an Italy, known for their skills for intricacies. However. Do you notice the less than precise colour stampings on the panda? They are hardly noticeable and on the larger scheme of things perhaps not the biggest of deals, and so very much a first world’s problem. Don't you think the way LV’s pochette accessoires in general is designed is an insult to our collective intelligence? Speaking of insults. What about Louis Vuitton demanding full payments from all of us, calling those "deposits", instead of "purchases" along with a status message saying our orders are "waiting validations" effectively implying that our fully paid orders are NOT yet VALID? For my own very modest purchase, which is less than the price of one of their LV Murakami bags today, Louis Vuitton holding my money for the past 3-4 months have costed me over $1 PER DAY. The 3-4 MONTHS WAIT is costing ME about $90 - $120. Plus opportunity costs. Let me repeat that. IT COSTS ME, for THEM, to hold MY money. With NO guarantee that I will receive my purchase. What is this? We are effectively providing LVMH, and Louis Vuitton, with their CAPITAL to produce the goods we just ordered. As if they do not already have them in stock before they advertise these items for sale. Which I do not believe they do. For those whose orders were never fulfilled, and are forced to received a full refund, YOU have effectively provided Louis Vuitton with an INTEREST FREE LOAN. Is LVMH a small struggling company without capital? Are they too poor to pay interests on loans? Is this Louis Louis Vuitton? Or Kickstarter and Indigogo? Are we crowdfunding Louis Vuitton? As far as I know, this was already happening last year in 2024 during Tyler The Creator capsule collection. Has it always been like this? I am not a regular customer of theirs. So trying to buy something last year was my experience of being insulted by LV first hand. Why are you standing being treated this way? — I have a love and hate relationship with Louis Vuitton. Historicaly, more hate than love. I hate it when Louis Vuitton makes light of their paying customers’ dignity. I love it when they brought in popular culture actors and pop art into the mix. I hate the LV pochette. I love LV Murakami. (The multicolour and the panda being my favourites). Marc Jacob’s Murakami x Louis Vuitton was my entry to Louis Vuitton. Virgil Abloh’s Louis Vuitton was my return to Louis Vuitton 20 years later. Pharrell Williams’ Louis Vuitton is likely to be my last sporadic foray into the brand.