
Fake Purse
You Better Look Rich Or Your Bag Will Look Fake
According   to Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher Renee Richardson   Gosline (yeah, that’s right, MIT is interested in your handbag),   consumers are far more likely to identify a counterfeit bag as real when   worn by someone that “looks” rich and a real bag as counterfeit when   worn by someone that “looks” poor. I’m not sure why that would come as a   huge surprise to anyone, but the fact that its been scientifically   confirmed means that we can all congratulate ourselves on being logical,   I suppose..
Before you fire up the keyboard and claim in the   comments that you don’t care if people think your bag is fake or that   it’s shallow for people to assume things about you because you dress a   certain way, please slow your roll and read the stuff after the jump.
Inherent   in fashion is the desire to create a cohesive personal style and  public  image, and if we weren’t expecting for it to matter in some way  how we  portray ourselves to the world, then we’d just all wear  sweatpants and  Ugg boots like we all really want to, deep down (or  maybe I’m  projecting). And it’s okay! Caring about public perception is  actually a  very grown-up thing to do, no matter how many times you  told your mom  that you didn’t care what people thought of you as a  teenager.
As  it turns out, the efforts that we make on behalf of  our egos are  perceived pretty accurately, which is to say that people  with money  usually do a good job looking like they have money, and  others are more  likely to assume that the bags of wealthy-looking  people are real. On  the other hand, most people think a bag is fake if  the other contextual  clues in the wearer’s appearance don’t project  wealth.
The most  relevant conclusion of the study for people  that love authentic bags is  that buying a counterfeits, by itself,  isn’t fooling anyone. Carrying a  fake bag (one which many people might  perceive as expensive in another  context) isn’t enough to override  everything else about someone’s  appearance – instead of making the  person look rich by proximity, it  just makes everyone think that the  bag they’re carrying is fake. That  means that the people out there that  bought a fake Louis Vuitton and  have no other personal style to speak  of wasted their money, and most  people are able to accurately surmise  that their bag isn’t the real  thing. As it turns out, you really can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear, as they say.
Bloomberg   really managed to bury the lede on this article, though. All of the   previous stuff seems fairly logical, but what I found most interesting   was this little statistic, nestled at the end: Of women that buy   counterfeit bags, 46% go on to buy the real thing within two years.   People that buy fakes may think that they have one over on the rest of   us bag-buying fools, but as it turns out, a lot of them are just at the   beginning of a fashion progression that will ultimately turn them into   the high-dollar consumers that they thought they could fool with a   pleather Gucci.