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All this week, Dominic Cummings has been photographed entering Downing Street with a raggedy old Vote Leave tote bag. This is such a blatant and unsubtle piece of political theatre, it barely needs explaining, but here we go anyway: Mr Cummings has heard about the first ever official VICE tote bag chart and wants his Leaver merchandise to earn a place on it.
Sorry, Dom, but it's too little, too late. All this summer we've been standing on street corners, at train stations, outside astroturf pitches and up to our nipples in public lidos, tallying up the tote bags the people of Britain have been carrying. And now, for the first time ever: the official VICE Top 10 Tote Bag Chart, the only chart based on the bags YOU have been carrying.
Sort of like how the Mercury Prize is still called that even though Mercury Communications stopped existing in 1999, so the American Apparel tote will outlive us all, until future generations think that store location list is just a rundown of airports with Oneworld lounges.
Famous tote bag company The New Yorker has become so successful that they also now produce a weekly magazine filled with investigative journalism, restaurant reviews and satirical essays. This bag remains its flagship and most popular product, which is somewhat surprising because it's not that good, is it It's just the logo within the logo.
The main purpose of this tote is to transmit to strangers that you read books, meaning it remains a staple for everyone from yummy mummies lugging their gyrotonics gear home to students taking stacks of their photography zine from pub to pub.
However, it's also a victim of its own success. In much the same way Sunny Delight became less popular when they let consumers choose between Florida and California flavours, there are now a number of materials, colour-ways and sizes available, so it no longer feels like there is a single iconic Daunt tote. The bottle-green is still a classic, but the grey is a monstrosity.
Let me admit here that I have never read the Jeeves and Wooster stories. While I'm not proud of that, at least it's something I have in common with the people who schlep around their shopping and their phoney literary pretension in one of these classic cover totes.
But carrying around a tote bag with a boring old book you've probably only watched the costume-drama version of is so gauche, honestly you might as well just nail a placard to your forehead that reads \"I HAVE NEVER WATCHED CHANNEL 5\".
The story goes that, one day, the LRB bookshop got a visit from a few young women from South Korea who wanted to buy a tote. The staff thought it was quite funny and wondered whether the magazine was well-read in Seoul. Then a few more showed up, then they started getting calls to buy hundreds, and ever since there's been a near-constant stream of people trying to get what has become the ultimate fashion accessory.
The LRB tote is really a condensed version of all the others on this list. Its popularity is based on people smart-signalling that they read a lofty literary magazine that is basically impossible to read. Have you ever tried I mean, I understand it's for serious ideas, but would it kill them to make it easily scannable, rather than 4,000 words squished onto a single page with no pictures or headlines The LRB is so hard to read, it makes Gravity's Rainbow look like Hop On Pop.
Which is why it's strange that this bag is the height of minimal chic. That said, you can also see why it's become the tote daddy: bold colours, lovely font, looks sturdy enough to carry a four pack of gins in a tin, plus a hoodie for if it gets cold in the evening.
Beth Dincuff Charleston, a Parsons professor of fashion history, places the origin of the status tote in the mid-1990s, when they were given away as swag bags at fashionable parties. As gifting culture grew, says Charleston, public relations and marketing teams filled branded tote bags with take-home freebies.
On your arms and over your shoulder, our embroidered totes are a classic timless accessory that\\'s good for the planet. Made with a sturdy wide bottom and reinforced cotton web handles, it\\'s made to support you in all your times of need.
The Wall Street Journal visited the Queens pop-up court, where defendants were offered free coffee, cookies and tote bags. A cross-eyed cat that lives in the office of the city council member also was present. 59ce067264