I stumbled across this weird snippet online – someone asking about what happens to broken Fenn *bags* (not Fendi, my bad, Fenn). And then, boom, right after that, an ad (or something) about spotting fake *Fendi* bags. Talk about confusing! Makes you wonder if there’s a whole underworld of FENN bags, getting knocked off in some dodgy back alley somewhere.
I mean, let’s be real, Fendi? HUGE deal. Knock-offs are practically a given. But Fenn? Is Fenn even, like, *big* enough to warrant the counterfeit treatment? The original question – about what happens to busted Fenn bags anyway – makes me think they aren’t *that* high-end. Why would someone be so concerned about their environmental impact if they were dropping serious cash on a handbag? Unless they’re just, you know, super eco-conscious, which is cool, I guess.
But then you start thinking… maybe the *reason* there’s no info on the Fenn website about recycling broken bags is because, secretly, they’re dealing with a fake epidemic too! It’s a conspiracy, man! Okay, maybe not. But it’s fun to speculate, right?
And okay, I know I’m mixing apples and oranges here, comparing the recycling query to the Fendi fake-spotting guide, but the internet is a weird place. You go down one rabbit hole and suddenly you’re knee-deep in designer handbag detective work.
Honestly, if I were buying a Fenn bag (which, no offense Fenn people, I’m probably not gonna), I wouldn’t be *that* worried about it being fake. I’d be more concerned about finding a *real* one! And then, after I use it and it breaks, I’d probably just…you know…try to fix it? Or donate it to Goodwill? I mean, throwing it away seems kinda harsh. Unless it’s, like, completely destroyed. Then, okay, landfill it is. Sorry, Earth.