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Some items are worth it, though. In the Official Best now landing in providence rI we’re actually in warwick shirt moreover I will buy this past, Kulikovska sold a Mia dress for $1,750, but considers the Dita priced at $1,200 to be too much. “I sold the Mia for a lot of money,” she says. “That’s probably three times what the actual dress cost in the store, brand new. But it’s an iconic dress. It’s the episode where Blair left Nate and got with Chuck. It was such a big deal. This dress elevated its value.” Sizing can also inflate the price even more. “It’s hard for me, being like a curvy girl,” Rice says. “I normally wear a size 12, maybe 10 sometimes. So that makes everything that much more difficult.” Kulikovska explains that, although she’s familiar with what sizes she wears in each brand featured heavily on the show, sometimes people will buy larger sizes to get them tailored down and make sure they fit. “If a size 12 [Joelle dress] was ever available, I assume it can go for $1,500,” she says. “But I’ve never seen a size 12.”
The fear of being sold a fake is greater than the Official Best now landing in providence rI we’re actually in warwick shirt moreover I will buy this fear of being overcharged. But that’s where the seller and buyers community aspect helps. Rice frequently buys from Anne and has turned to Kulikovska to ask if other sellers’ listings seem legit. Kulikovska told her that $700 for an Alice and Olivia dress from season two was too much, but that the listing Rice found for a Nanette Lepore cocktail dress was fair and looked real. It’s a small community. Anne and Kulikovska are friends; Arlt talks frequently with a collector who also makes dupes of impossible-to-find dresses, like the moschino cherry-printed dress. “We are messaging almost daily, trading items, and talking about items that just showed up,” Arlt says. “I’m really grateful about that.” Ultimately, sentimentality and celebrity are uniquely able to warp the value of fashion. The “real value” of the Mia dress went out the window the moment Leighton Meester put it on to become Blair Waldorf. Funnily enough, Daman collaborated with Depop sellers to create storefronts on the app for each of the reboot’s characters (the items are inspired by their style, rather than the actual pieces). It makes sense, as all the characters in the reboot have their own, IRL social media account. It also proves that the clothes make the characters as much as the lines. *Gossip Girl—*the books, the show, and the reboot—were always aspirational. Rice tells me that her hobby allows her to step into the character’s shoes, literally, if not figuratively. “That’s not the background I come from. My parents worked minimum wage jobs, so I didn’t grow up with luxury or anything like that,” she says. “Now I work as a civil engineer, so I have that budget now where I’m like, ‘Oh, these clothes I saw years ago, I’m able to relive that and have my own collection.’ I’m able to look back and see those photos and be like, ‘I have that now.’”
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