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  • Faust
    kitsch killer
    • Sep 2006
    • 37852

    Accessory dogs.



    Shit like that makes my blood boil, I swear. Look at all these expensive pampered little bitches.. and their dogs... Grrrrrrrrrrr.



    Link to article




















    December 7, 2006



    Woman’s Best Friend, or Accessory?















    OH, the places Paige has
    been. Like all the top New Yorkers, she dines downtown at Mercer
    Kitchen, eyes the heart of palm at the deli E.A.T. on Madison Avenue
    and appraises the calfskin boots at Gucci. “We even drink together,”
    said Dina Lewis, a real estate agent and Paige’s constant companion.




    At Plug Uglies on Third Avenue, “Paige sits on the bar stool and
    everything,” Ms. Lewis said. “It’s like having a very good-looking,
    very drunk friend with you all the time.”




    Except that Paige is a doll-sized Chihuahua. She travels with her
    mistress everywhere, scoping out the world from the confines of a
    Balenciaga look-alike bag.




    Paige is what is known as a sleeve dog, an emblem of status since
    antiquity. Once toted by fashionable women inside the folds of their
    gowns, diminutive pets have been the favorites of nobles from Marie
    Antoinette to Elizabeth II. The pseudo-royals of Hollywood also favor them, actresses and gossip-column fixtures like Tori Spelling and Mickey Rourke.




    Now, thanks in part to their red carpet visibility, compact breeds
    are more popular than ever. “We’re seeing a nationwide trend toward
    smaller dogs,” said Niki Marshall Friedman, a spokeswoman for the
    American Kennel Club. For example, registration of the Brussels griffon
    has gone up 231 percent in the last 10 years; Norwich terrier
    registration has risen 91 percent.




    Flaunted as fashion statements, pint-sized canines are, to some
    minds, the fur-bearing equivalent of a pair of Louboutin pumps or other
    accessory. “I think of them as a handbag with a heartbeat,” said Robin
    Bowden, a vice president of Prudential Douglas Elliman, a real estate
    company in Manhattan. Ms. Bowden’s office on West 17th Street is a kind
    of home-away-from-home to a clutch of lavishly outfitted lap dogs
    belonging to various employees. “They have little beds and they scamper
    up and down,” she said. “I’ve seen brokers showing expensive SoHo
    lofts, turning up with these tiny puppy dogs in their designer bags.”




    In some parts of town tiny pets as chicly turned out as their
    owners vie with BlackBerry pagers as on-the-go emblems of status.
    “People like the portability of a small dog,” Ms. Friedman said. They
    are also impressed by celebrities, she added, who like to show off
    their Charos, Freddies and Desirees on the red carpet.




    Yorkshire terriers, Cavalier King Charles spaniels, French bulldogs
    and papillons, which can live in small apartments, are among the most
    coveted breeds, according to the kennel club, favored by young women
    and baby boomers alike. “As the kids go off to college, having Fluffy
    around is a comfort,” said Bob Vetere, the president of the American
    Pet Product Manufacturers Association. “The pet attains an elevated
    status,” Mr. Vetere said. “To make ourselves feel better, we tend to
    reward it in human, not in doggie, terms.”




    In the view of many owners, no amount of pampering is too much. They
    blithely ignore health ordinances barring dogs from restaurants.
    Muffin, a 3-year-old Yorkie, is a weekend regular at the Cafe Orlin on
    St. Marks Place in Manhattan. “I like to take her to brunch,” said Alex
    Revana, her mistress.




    Ms. Revana, a freelance fashion stylist, has provided Muffin with
    her own doggie garment rack with miniature hangers to hold knitted,
    fleece and quilted cover-ups. Muffin’s toys include a rubber Chewy
    Vuitton, and she dines on California Natural, organic pet food.




    Paige, Ms. Lewis’s dog, owns 40 outfits, among them an Hermès coat.
    Part of Ms. Lewis’s closet is designated for the dog. Like her
    mistress, she likes to make a fashion statement. “With the two of us
    it’s an equal opportunity thing,” Ms. Lewis said. “I sit up at wee
    hours of the night online to find that one store in, like, Canada or
    Switzerland, so Paige can have that one sweater that no New Yorker will
    ever have.”




    Mr. Fudge, a 4-year-old Chihuahua who belongs to Wendy Kaplan, a fit
    model and personal style consultant in New York, owns a yellow Old Navy
    raincoat, a denim fleece vest and, for blustery days, an orange
    simulated snakeskin coat with a pocket “in case he needs a biscuit,”
    Ms. Kaplan explained.




    Mr. Fudge travels in a leopard-spotted bag. “There are places I have
    to sneak him into — the post office, Gristedes, the neighborhood
    bakery,” Ms. Kaplan said.




    No fan of ordinances barring pets from restaurants and other indoor
    public spaces, she demanded: “Why should that be? We are after all a
    doggie culture.”




    To a degree, that seems correct. Designer boutiques, hotels,
    airlines and even neighborhood bars are quick to extend doggie
    hospitality. “All kinds of services present themselves that allow
    people who have pets to travel with them,” Mr. Vetere of the pet
    products organization said. “You’re talking about the Tinkerbells of
    the world as opposed to the Godzillas.”




    Rebecca Rand, a spokeswoman for the W hotel chain, which offers a
    canine-friendly Woof program, said guests traveling with small dogs
    have become a significant trend. “People are treating them more like
    family, so we try to accommodate them as much as possible,” she said.
    That includes pet pillows with special treats placed on them at
    turndown time.




    Lap dogs and others are tolerated, if not always welcome, at many
    offices these days. Some 20 percent of businesses polled in a survey by
    the pet products association last spring permitted pets in the
    workplace, Mr. Vetere said. And 38 million working Americans over 18
    believe having pets at work leads to a more productive environment.




    Melanie Lazenby, a real estate agent in New York, said that bringing
    Eva, her five-pound Chihuahua, to the office has even brought her
    clients. Recently the owner of a $3.5 million Greenwich Village
    apartment, also a Chihuahua owner, gave Ms. Lazenby the listing once
    she glimpsed Eva. “It was all on the basis of doggie love,” she said.




    All this canine-human togetherness can raise eyebrows. No one is
    more mindful of the potential absurdities of a lap dog than some
    owners. “To some people in the office I could be considered borderline
    tragic,” Ms. Lewis said with a laugh. “I figure life is short, so why
    not enjoy the frivolous, ridiculous side of it.”




    Not everyone is amused. The sight of Ms. Lazenby, tall, impeccable
    and fair-haired, dressed identically with her dog, has the potential to
    engender sneers, she knows. “It’s the classic ‘Legally Blonde’
    situation,” she said. “If your dog has on a really fancy jacket and you
    have on a fancy jacket, too, it makes some people smirk.”




    It also gives some dog trainers pause. They point out that pets are
    not accessories, and treating them like prize possessions, no matter
    how well meaning, can deprive an animal of what it needs.
    “Socialization, training and exercise are paramount,” said Bash Dibra,
    a trainer based in New York. “Otherwise you have a problem.” An overly
    coddled dog can become territorial and aggressive, Mr. Dibra said.
    “Sometimes the dog goes into a rage. It’s not a happy situation.”




    Patty LaRocco, who brings her Yorkie, Dylan, to business and social
    gatherings, acknowledges that doggie socializing has its limits. “A
    banker in a nice suit doesn’t want Dylan jumping up and down.”




    On the other hand, pets can be a social icebreaker.




    Ms. Lazenby, who moved to Manhattan just weeks before 9/11,
    recalled: “It was very hard to meet people. The whole city was in a
    depression, and it wasn’t really a social time.




    “I bought the dog because I was so lonely, and she ended up bringing tons of people into my life.”




    It does not surprise Ms. Kaplan, the fit model, that Mr. Fudge is a
    people magnet. Tricked out in a pink rhinestone collar, he accompanies
    her to parties, where “people who might not otherwise talk to you, talk
    to you,” she said. And why wouldn’t they? “My dog makes better eye
    contact than some of the people I know.”














    Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde

    StyleZeitgeist Magazine
  • Fuuma
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2006
    • 4050

    #2
    Re: Accessory dogs.



    Thanks for the new sig:



    “If your dog has on a really fancy jacket and you have on a fancy jacket, too, it makes some people smirk.”



    Selling CCP, Harnden, Raf, Rick etc.
    http://www.stylezeitgeist.com/forums...me-other-stuff

    Comment

    • onemancult
      Member
      • Dec 2006
      • 81

      #3
      Re: Accessory dogs.



      I'm thinking of picking up some accessory humans during the holiday sales, maybe a few starved little kids I can fit into miniature versions of all my outfits? Or maybe some 'exotic' cadre of girls to dance and pose behind me wherever I go, a la Gwen Stefani?

      Comment

      • casem
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2006
        • 2590

        #4
        Re: Accessory dogs.



        Faust, you have offended me so much I'm putting Princess in her LV dog bag and leaving!



        [:P]

        music

        Comment

        • fixoid
          Junior Member
          • Sep 2006
          • 17

          #5
          Re: Accessory dogs.

          [quote user="onemancult"]

          I'm thinking of picking up some accessory humans during the holiday sales, maybe a few starved little kids I can fit into miniature versions of all my outfits? Or maybe some 'exotic' cadre of girls to dance and pose behind me wherever I go, a la Gwen Stefani?



          [/quote]





          madonna is one step ahead of you.

          Comment

          • Faust
            kitsch killer
            • Sep 2006
            • 37852

            #6
            Re: Accessory dogs.

            [quote user="casem83"]

            Faust, you have offended me so much I'm putting Princess in her LV dog bag and leaving!



            [:P]



            [/quote]



            Her name is foo-foo - get it right, honey!

            Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde

            StyleZeitgeist Magazine

            Comment

            • malek
              Junior Member
              • Sep 2006
              • 27

              #7
              Re: Accessory dogs.



              Sonia rykiel launched a line of clothing or dogs, calling it deluxe dog or something like that...



              I don't think that pets are happy to wear these things, neither to eat luxury food or whatever! They're animals, all they need is basic healthyfood, sleep and cuddles! making them wear outrageously expensive outfits is so ridiculous, their owners oughta have a baby instead of transfering their affection on a poor dog...

              Comment

              • minomni
                Senior Member
                • Oct 2006
                • 167

                #8
                Re: Accessory dogs.

                no way - babies simply can't compete as conversation starters. though the level of 'cuteness' can be comparable on some levels, a small human accessory is just too inconvenient. maybe if they re-engineered the human growth hormone to prevent babies from growing past a certain stage.. and found a way to prevent all those messy spills..

                Comment

                • Faust
                  kitsch killer
                  • Sep 2006
                  • 37852

                  #9
                  Re: Accessory dogs.



                  [quote user="minomni"]no way - babies simply can't compete as conversation starters. though the level of 'cuteness' can be comparable on some levels, a small human accessory is just too inconvenient. maybe if they re-engineered the human growth hormone to prevent babies from growing past a certain stage.. and found a way to prevent all those messy spills..
                  [/quote]



                  I also see names being a problem for babies. Maybe we should start calling babies Foo-Foo, and Bee-Bee, it's just soooo cuuuute!!!

                  Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde

                  StyleZeitgeist Magazine

                  Comment

                  • Servo2000
                    Senior Member
                    • Oct 2006
                    • 2183

                    #10
                    Re: Accessory dogs.

                    Man, and you have me crap for my First View thread, faust, haha!

                    Did anyone ever see those bags that were supposed to look like dead dogs hanging upside down? I can't seem to find a picture anymore. They weren't really impressive in any manner other than that I sort of chuckled when I saw it.
                    WTB: Rick Owens Padded MA-1 Bomber XS (LIMO / MOUNTAIN)

                    Comment

                    • thelion1856
                      Junior Member
                      • Dec 2006
                      • 17

                      #11
                      Re: Accessory dogs.



                      Living in southern california, i see it literally every single fucking day. The teenager with the oversized sunglasses who brought out her hand held dog with its own clothing on or the old rich bitch hag who dresses like she is 20 over accessorizing herself and carrying her hand held dog.




                      Even the "soccer mom" i've seen with one of these dogs. Its just how you'd picture it. Southern California is basically overrunned by a bunch of people who watch too much MTV and get their fasion advice from STAR magazine and E! Entertainment t.v.

                      Comment

                      • interman
                        Member
                        • Dec 2006
                        • 88

                        #12
                        Re: Accessory dogs.

                        Even in Norway this trend has grown the past few years, albeit slowly. I've gone to a few dog shows and I haven't seen that many there, but on various forums I often see questions regarding accessory dogs. Fortunately they're so expensive here that most girls are blown away by the cost and follow some other stupid whim instead.

                        Comment

                        • Servo2000
                          Senior Member
                          • Oct 2006
                          • 2183

                          #13
                          Re: Accessory dogs.

                          [quote user="thelion1856"]

                          Living in southern california, i see it literally every single fucking day. The teenager with the oversized sunglasses who brought out her hand held dog with its own clothing on or the old rich bitch hag who dresses like she is 20 over accessorizing herself and carrying her hand held dog.




                          Even the "soccer mom" i've seen with one of these dogs. Its just how you'd picture it. Southern California is basically overrunned by a bunch of people who watch too much MTV and get their fasion advice from STAR magazine and E! Entertainment t.v.



                          [/quote]



                          It's so true that it hurts. It's everything horrible about fashion meets relaxed California style.So ill-fitting horrible everything.



                          With uggs!

                          WTB: Rick Owens Padded MA-1 Bomber XS (LIMO / MOUNTAIN)

                          Comment

                          • casem
                            Senior Member
                            • Sep 2006
                            • 2590

                            #14
                            Re: Accessory dogs.

                            Yeah, I don't know that I could live in a perpetually warm climate because the style is so bad (is that shallow?). I think Florida is worse though (i'm there now for christmas) sure Cali is super trendy and plastic etc. but Florida, well it's still the south, so many Nascar sleevless shirts, and I don't think people own pants around here.
                            music

                            Comment

                            • Faust
                              kitsch killer
                              • Sep 2006
                              • 37852

                              #15
                              Re: Accessory dogs.

                              [quote user="Servo2000"][quote user="thelion1856"]

                              Living in southern california, i see it literally every single fucking day. The teenager with the oversized sunglasses who brought out her hand held dog with its own clothing on or the old rich bitch hag who dresses like she is 20 over accessorizing herself and carrying her hand held dog.




                              Even the "soccer mom" i've seen with one of these dogs. Its just how you'd picture it. Southern California is basically overrunned by a bunch of people who watch too much MTV and get their fasion advice from STAR magazine and E! Entertainment t.v.



                              [/quote]



                              It's so true that it hurts. It's everything horrible about fashion meets relaxed California style.So ill-fitting horrible everything.



                              With uggs!



                              [/quote]



                              In 80F weather!!!

                              Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months - Oscar Wilde

                              StyleZeitgeist Magazine

                              Comment

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