.Btw - I’ve never seen an uglier bag than her new neverfull. She obviously loves it because it screams designer but the black embossed leather looks plasticky and cheap. I’m not sure it will take off in London.
wait...are we saying she bought YET ANOTHER NEVERFULL in addition to the white Chanel (and 2 blue Chanels last month)??
i think its established that she is not stylish- i seem to recall her buying a neverfull just because there was a hot stamped badge option and she chose the weirdest designs and subsequently barely wore it. she reminds me of certain tourists you see around capital cities with no style but dripping in labels.
its an illness! and desperation to appeal to some market that i dont think really exists anymore(?)...i dont think she gets that at this present time she probably would get more views by doing something different - like shopping her own extensive and barely used wardrobe. or setting herself a kind of styling challenge. heck i would pay for her to get through a month not wearing a single visibly branded item from head to toe on her social media feed at this point


I know a rich lady who buys luxury items - but she only buys them twice a year - her birthday and Christmas, as presents for herself. And she buys 1 item each time - like one Chanel bag, one LV scarf, 1 Gucci belt. That's it. Of course over the 10+ years, she's collected a fine collection but you don't get the impression she has a shopping addiction. Luxury items are like the cherry on top of her cake (she has a nice beautiful house, she spends money on gourmet foods and travels around the world, and her children and pets).


this. i am far from being considered wealthy, but i do have a comfortable amount of disposable income (after savings and investments) since we dont currently have children, and this is precisely how i “treat” myself- a little bit at a time, thought over a long time and built up over many years. i’m in my mid-thirties now and i can proudly say i have clothing i still wear that get alot of compliments that i bought when i was 23 and had to save a lot longer for (and they’re not eye wateringly expensive pieces either).
when i first found Amie i thought she would be relatable as a young working female with some disposable income who could give helpful reviews on items i was potentially eyeing at the time. but her constant spending on unnecessary “of the moment” pieces just to discard them started to really grate on me to the point i would feel
nauseous watching her hauls. because i also enjoy travel it really bothered me that she seemed to keep holidaying at the same destinations just to shop at the local malls and eat at global fastfood chains (cheesecake factory, in n out). i basically unsubscribed when they bought their house and she focused most on building her cheap ikea closet room despite the house clearly needing alot of work.
youtubers i discovered recently are Style Apotheca and Audrey Coyne - they seem more sensible, practical and realistic than delusional frumpy Amie.