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Vere Bag: The Coolest Resusable Shopping Bag

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We can always count on Velocity Art & Design to bring us the best, newest and coolest products. How's The Vere Bag for a non-frumpy reusable shopping bag? These are so fancy that they could be used around the house, for something like containing umbrellas in the entry or holding blankets in the living room.

 
 

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Designed by Kathy Moskal, the bags are made of Tyvek, washable and recyclable &mdash not that you would ever want to recycle them. They are $20 each at Velocity Art & Design.

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Look!, shopping bag, velocity art & design, Vere

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Comments (16)

Why?

posted by obdimples on October 19th 2009 at 3:20pm
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I could see a very fashion-focused person using these. I just use a bag I got for free from a conference as my reusable shopping bag. They are neat-looking!

posted by clampers on October 19th 2009 at 3:35pm
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I totally appreciate these bags. I guess i am a fashion-focused person and it matters to me whats on my shoulder. A lot of canvass bags do not strike my fancy, so I'm totally behind these more glamorous shopping bags. :)

posted by MODERnestS on October 19th 2009 at 3:46pm
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I must be reading too many snarky blogs, because I took the headline literally. These look like insulated bags to keep cold food cold.

posted by kiljoywashere on October 19th 2009 at 3:48pm
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I've always been partial to this bag.

http://store.theonion.com/stop-staring-at-my-tote-tote-black-p-51.html

posted by spinsLPs on October 19th 2009 at 3:54pm
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I don't really understand the purpose for these....

When I think "reusable shopping bag", I'm thinking about inexpensive and durable grocery bags....

These bags look like pretty grocery bags... but why on earth would someone spend $20 a pop for a bag for a half gallon of milk and some bread?

So I'm guessing this is more like a large bag to shove your umbrella and lunch for work? In that case, why not get something that looks less like a grocery bag?

posted by modern on long island on October 19th 2009 at 4:07pm
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The silver one kinda looks like the dress that almost got Christopher kicked off Project Runway a couple weeks ago.

posted by shantiquax on October 19th 2009 at 4:24pm
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I think the gold one is rather pretty and can see using it for rainy day grocery shopping. I walk to the market and take 1-2 nylon bags to fill up and they get pretty wet by the time I get back home.

I can see these for us urban people, probably don't need it if you drive to the store and back.

posted by LoriSF on October 19th 2009 at 4:48pm
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all i can think of is the nonstop crinkling noise. i like shiny, but these are not my style.

posted by nickety on October 19th 2009 at 5:08pm
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The point, modern on long island, is that you REuse it, not that you spend $20 a pop.

It would've been nice to mention the dimensions. Different companies have VERY different ideas about what constitutes a good "shopping bag" size.

posted by Jezebella on October 19th 2009 at 5:26pm
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I want that gold one.

posted by bejeweled on October 19th 2009 at 8:52pm
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I find "$20 a pop" preferable to the $2 ones most grocery stores sell, which frequently break and puncture.

posted by KidMoe on October 19th 2009 at 9:18pm
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I like the look of these, but I wouldn't spend $20 on one.

posted by Honore on October 20th 2009 at 8:46am
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Hey, if it gets someone to reuse a grocery bag (that otherwise might not) why judge? It's better than plastic any day of the week. Some folks just need to feel stylish and shiny when they do their shopping!

posted by learnbydesign on October 20th 2009 at 9:02am
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Jezebella,

I get the re-use thing. I have 15 reusable grocery bags myself. But I bought them for under $2 a piece at target (the red ones with the picture of a tree). They're a year old and still in perfect shape. I use them for grocery shopping and bringing my lunch to work... so they get daily usage and don't fall apart.

you definitely don't need to spend $20 to get a reliable reusable grocery bag. You can spend less than 1/10th that.

posted by modern on long island on October 20th 2009 at 1:46pm
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I think these would be great for shopping beyond groceries. I try to carry reusable bags with me when I buy other things, too, and I have to say I feel super dorky whipping out my trader joe's canvas bag in a nice department store and my nylon baggu is rather transparent and I prefer not displaying my purchases when walking down the street. I think if you really incorporate resuable bags into your everyday life (and you're not just storing them in the trunk of your car for grocery runs) then paying $20 for one you find attractive is quite reasonable.

posted by bewarethebaobabs on October 20th 2009 at 4:45pm
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