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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
Knot Square Large Bags Purses Handbags Vintage Faux Leather Totes Shoulder Blue Knot Square Large Bags Purses Handbags Vintage Faux Leather Totes Shoulder Blue Paypal 0 Bid US $73.00 12m
Estate Brown Large Coach Vintage All Leather Handbag w Hangtag Beautiful Estate Brown Large Coach Vintage All Leather Handbag w Hangtag Beautiful Paypal 0 Bid US $24.99 13m
Stone Mountain vintage British tan leather purse crossbody messenger bag Stone Mountain vintage British tan leather purse crossbody messenger bag Paypal 3 Bids US $2.25 18m
Black Faux Leather Pocketbook Purse Shoulder Bag Vintage Style Black Faux Leather Pocketbook Purse Shoulder Bag Vintage Style Paypal 0 Bid US $9.99 19m
VTG DOONEY BOURKE GREY BROWN PEBBLED SOFT LEATHER CROSSBODY PURSE $259 VTG DOONEY BOURKE GREY BROWN PEBBLED SOFT LEATHER CROSSBODY PURSE $259 Paypal 0 Bid US $16.95 20m
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FERRETTI, Alberta

Born: Riccione, Italy, 1950

That rarest of breeds - clever designer and top flight manufacturer - Alberta Ferretti is one of the most powerful women in Italian fashion. Owner of Aeffe, a high-tech computerized manufacturing complex near Rimini, Ferretti trained at her mother's small atelier before opening her first shop in Cattolica at 18 years old, selling Armani, Krizia and Versace. She switched from selling to designing, and today heads one of the most technologically advanced factories, which has produced collections for Franco Moschino, Rifat Ozbek, Narciso Rodriguez and Jean Paul Gaultier, while producing her own name lines. `One of my principles is there's no such thing as "It's impossible"', she told Vogue in 1992, `I always try.'

FERRE, Gianfranco

Born: Born: Legnano, Italy, 1944

VOG-135Famously compared with Frank Lloyd Wright, Gianfranco Ferre has a rotund physique and aesthetic sensibility. His grandfather designed bicycles and his father was the owner of two factories. Ferre originally trained as an architect at Milan Polytechnic, graduating in 1969. His favourite architectural triumphs include the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris and the Torre Velasca in Milan. Ferre's first official show was presented in a restaurant in Via San Murillo, Milan, in 1974. Four years later came his first collection, `Gianfranco Ferre Donna', followed by a menswear line in 1982.

FERRAGAMO, Salvatore

Born: Bonito, Italy, 1898
Died: Fiumetto, Italy, 1960

VOG-134Salvatore Ferragamo's supremacy in making innovative shoe shapes was a product of his apprenticeship with a craftsman in his native Italy. In 1923 he emigrated to America and opened a shoe shop in Santa Barbara, California, making couture shoes. His client list included Audrey Hepburn, Sophia Loren, the Duchess of Windsor and Eva Perón. He also worked with producer and director Cecil B De Mille. Ferragamo was a perfectionist and innovator. He worked with unusual materials - Cellophane, raffia, lace and crystal, as well as fish skin and sea leopard - and instigated new shapes, including the platform shoe, an ancient Chinese idea which he relaunched in 1938. Between 1927 and 1960 he produced 20,000 designs, and published his biography, Shoemaker of Dreams in 1957. He didn't care that his style was relentlessly plagiarized - Ferragamo was the original: `Elegance and comfort are not incompatible, and whoever maintains the contrary simply doesn't know what he is talking about.'

FÉRAUD, Louis

Born: Arles, France, 1921

Chic suits and sophisticated French tailoring are the signatures of Louis Féraud. Glamorous and wearable, his clothes appeal to groomed thirtysomethings and women of a `certain age': his clothes were worn by Joan Collins during her Dynasty and Dallas periods, but have also been worn by Brigitte Bardot, Catherine Deneuve and Kim Novak.

FENDI

Founded by Adele Casagrande in 1918

One of the largest and most important of the Italian fashion dynasties, Fendi began as a leather and fur workshop over a century ago. Its founder, Adele Casagrande, who married Eduardo Fendi in 1925, changed the company's name after the death of her father in 1954.

FATH, Jacques

Born: Lafitte, France, 1912
Died: Paris, France, 1954

Jacques Fath was the darling of the Parisian social scene, his name spoken in the same sentence as Cristobal Balenciaga and Christian Dior. Fath's style, however, was less breathtaking and more a celebration of the female form. Described by Vogue in the 1950s as `a comet', Fath shot to fame after the Second World War, in the wake of the fashion revolution caused by Dior's New Look: women dressed according to the Paris directive and the press were, once again, frequenting the front row.

Fath had dressmaking in his blood - his great-grandmother was dressmaker to Empress Eugénie - but he started his career as a book-keeper. He showed his first collection in 1937, but it was in the post-war era of renewed optimism and femininity that he made his mark. While Balenciaga and Dior concentrated on sculpture and the invention of new proportions, Fath focused on undulating lines and elegant juxtaposition of colours. `Persian lamb is dyed blue to trim a blue suit,' said Vogue in its collection report of September 1956. `Fath carries the idea still further with green, red and purple.' During his short, sharp career, Fath made a lasting impression. A retrospective of his work was held in Paris in 1993.

FARHI, Nicole

Born: Nice, France, 1946

Unpretentious clothes with nothing to prove are at the core of Nicole Farhi's philosophy. After studying fashion in Paris, Farhi freelanced at Agnès B and Jean-Charles de Castelbajac. She moved to Britain in 1973 and worked for French Connection with Stephen Marks. A decade later she formed her own label, and launched a menswear collection in 1989. Her flagship store on London's Sloane Street opened in October 1998. Like Joseph, she has expanded her business to include a restaurant - in her case Nicole's - situated beneath her Bond Street store. Farhi opened her first New York branch in 1999.

ETTEDGUI, Joseph

Born: Casablanca, Morocco, 1936

Son of a French-Moroccan furniture retailer, Joseph Ettedgui emigrated to London in the late 1950s and trained to be a hairdresser. During the 1960s he began travelling to Paris to see the ready-to-wear collections. There, he met Kenzo, whose brightly-coloured sweaters he started to sell in the reception area of his King's Road salon. Before long, the clothes had eclipsed the hairdressing, and Joseph's first shop was established below the salon in the early 1970s.

ESTRADA, Angel

Born: Barcelona, Spain, 1957
Died: New York, New York, USA, 1989

A talented designer, who had a flair for combining sculptural shapes with fluid effects, Angel Estrada secured a Vogue front cover - a satin bustier with luggage zip - within his first year of business in November 1986.

ENGLISH ECCENTRICS

Founded by Helen David in 1983

Having trained at London's Camberwell School of Art and Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, Helen David - founder of English Eccentrics - is known for her print, colour and quirky textiles, which mix the baroque with aesthetically pleasing shapes. Not limited to accessories, the English Eccentrics label also encompasses shirts, often with a Pucci-esque feel.