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Many assume that the only place to get well-maintained, highly desirable vintage handbags is at a local boutique. Although most vintage dealers tend to specialize in créme of the crop merchandise, they also charge a hefty premium.

Often the owners of these shops find hidden gems on eBay, jack up the price and resell the items. If you like the thrill of bargain hunting, bypass the markup and get the authentic handbag of your dreams online.

This site makes the hunt as easy as possible. You can browse vintage auctions by brand, style, and color. So get to it, check out the menu above and see what you can dig up!

Auctions Closing Soon on eBay
Vintage Burberry Burberrys Thick Wool Leather Pochette Small Tote Hand Bag Vintage Burberry Burberrys Thick Wool Leather Pochette Small Tote Hand Bag Paypal US $199.00 19m
New Designer Vintage Larger Clutch Bag Satchel Black Handbag Hobo Pu Leather 64 New Designer Vintage Larger Clutch Bag Satchel Black Handbag Hobo Pu Leather 64 Paypal 0 Bid US $19.98 19m
VINTAGE TWEED LEATHER HANDBAG W 5 COMPARTMENTS VINTAGE TWEED LEATHER HANDBAG W 5 COMPARTMENTS Paypal US $65.00 25m
NWOT MAURIZIO TAIUTI vintage leather painted flower purse tote bag $360 NWOT MAURIZIO TAIUTI vintage leather painted flower purse tote bag $360 Paypal US $129.00 25m
Vintage Gucci Messenger Crossbody bag Purse Brown Leather small GG logo Vintage Gucci Messenger Crossbody bag Purse Brown Leather small GG logo Paypal US $89.99 25m
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Lilly Allen Loves her Chanel Zipped Bags

Lilly-AllenWhen Lily Allen first came on to the music scene she had a quirky taste in fashion, famed for wearing prom dresses with sneakers and gold jewelry. Although her quirkiness is still there, her style has definitely improved as her love of designer bags shows. But there seems to be only one bag that has stolen Lily’s heart – her Chanel Vintage Zipped bag.

DESSÈS, Jean

Born: Alexandria, Egypt, 1904
Died: Athens, Greece, 1970

In 1950 Vogue described Jean Dessès, an Egyptian-born Greek, as daring and influential. ‘Dessès creates with a hand that is dashing and unafraid. The inspired results: flattering décolletages; clothes with easy and young movement of line.’ A couturier who came to prominence in post-war Paris, Dessès had become so famous by the turn of the 1950s that he created the ‘Jean Dessès American Collection’, a range that was designed and sold directly through wholesalers. He was acclaimed as one of Vogue’s ‘Names in the News’, ‘hailed and applauded by American store buyers, recognised and respected by your customers.’

DEMEULEMEESTER, Ann

Born: Kortrijk, Belgium, 1959

Ann Demeulemeester is a member of a group of experimental designers who emerged from Belgium in the mid-1980s. Termed deconstructivists, they achieved recognition by creating raw, elemental, non-traditional clothes. Demeulemeester designs with a close attention to detail and prefers to concentrate on pairing unusual fabrics, rather than focusing on colour and ornament. Although she is a meticulous planner, her clothes always look uncontrived. Her style is a melting pot of punk, gothic and Japanese; long coats and dresses in draped fabrics have become her signature, together with halter-neck vests and trousers and skirts which expose the hip bone. Often contradictory, Demeulemeester combines unconventional cutting and tailoring with distressed fabrics and crucifixes, and always mixes the austere with the avant-garde.

DELAUNAY, Sonia

Born: Odessa, Ukraine, 1885
Died: Paris, France, 1979

Painter, textile designer and supreme colourist, Sonia Delaunay’s dresses epitomize the meaning of modernity. Abstract and angular, her designs contain the juxtaposition of geometric shapes and squares and developed out of Cubism. Delaunay’s designs were worn by Nancy Cunard, Gloria Swanson and a host of French film stars and international artists. She delivered a lecture at the Sorbonne in Paris in 1926 called ‘The Influence of Painting on Fashion Design’. An amazing 94 years old when she died, Delaunay left a rich seam of work and dresses, which look as if they were designed yesterday.

DE LISI, Ben

Born: Brooklyn, New York, USA, 1955

Winner of British Fashion’s Glamour Award two years running, Ben de Lisi was born in Brooklyn, raised in Long Island and graduated from the Pratt Institute, New York, in 1977. He worked briefly for Bloomingdales while he was still at college, designed a range of T-shirts which he sold to Saks Fifth Avenue, and spent four years with a young designer called Penelope before launching his own menswear line called ‘Benedetto’ – his full Christian name.

DE PRÉMONVILLE, Myrène

Born: Hendaye, France, 1949

Known for her use of colour and fastidious tailoring with a slight theatrical bent, Myrène De Prémonville was described by Vogue in 1987 as ‘the new discovery of the past two seasons … her collection neither based on a lifestyle, nor a customer, but the creative urge of someone who has worked half her life in fashion.’

DE LA RENTA, Oscar

Born: Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, 1932

Colourful and sociable, Oscar de la Renta studied art in Spain, worked for Cristobal Balenciaga and was then employed as an assistant to Antonio del Castillo at Lanvin. He cites Coco Chanel and Balenciaga as the major talents of the century.

In 1967 de la Renta married the editor-in-chief of French Vogue, Françoise de la Languade. He later married New York socialite, Annette Reed, in 1989. De la Renta lives in Connecticut, but also owns an opulent apartment in New York and a luxurious retreat in La Romana in the Dominican Republic. Famous for his opulent eveningwear, which is both vibrant and tasteful, his clients list is a roll call of America’s socially significant – Liza Minelli, Nancy Reagan, Joan Collins, Ivana Trump, Jacqueline Onassis and Fay Dunaway – and his friends include Dr Henry Kissinger and television presenter Barbara Walters.

De la Renta is well known for his services to charity: he set up a children’s home, Casa de Niños, in his native Dominican Republic – and adopted one of their children, Moises, at 8 months old.

Although de la Renta’s signature is flamboyance and colour, he has survived major swings in fashion. In 1991, at 58 years of age and with annual sales of $350 million, de la Renta showed his collection for the first time in an attempt to broaden his client base – it was also the first time an American designer had shown in Paris. The public relations exercise paid off: two years later, in 1993, he was appointed designer to Pierre Balmain – making him the first American designer to head a Parisian couture house. His career had, at last, come full circle.

DACHÉ, Lilly

Born: Bégles, France, 1907
Died: Louveciennes, France, 1989

The personification of the American Dream, Lilly Daché was a French immigrant who, within the space of a decade, became an enduring household name for chic millinery.

CREED, Charles Southey

Born: Paris, France, 1909
Died: London, England, 1966

Son of Henry Creed of Paris – who claimed to be the first tailor to introduce tweeds into women’s suits – Charles Creed was one of the movers and shakers of British fashion in the 1940s. ‘He was pre-destined to design exquisite clothes,’ said Vogue in 1946. ‘Like any artist he seeks perfection, in his case it is tailored perfection.’

CRAHAY, Jules-François

Born: Liège, Belgium, 1917
Died: Monte Carlo, Monaco, 1988

Son of a couturière, Jules-François Crahay began his career early. At 13 years old he was already working as an illustrator at his mother’s couture house. In 1934 Crahay moved to Paris to study couture and then returned to join his mother’s establishment, where he helped dress Belgium’s high society for two years. During the Second World War he was captured and imprisoned for four years. Crahay then joined Nina Ricci – his 1959 collection was rapturously received – and defected to Jeanne Lanvin in 1963, succeeding Antonio del Castillo and directing the collections for 20 years. ‘I have no use for afternoon clothes,’ he once remarked, ‘fashion leaps from the little morning suit to the evening gown.’