A Guide to Vintage Louis Vuitton French Company Bags

Have you come across a Louis Vuitton French Company or Saks Fifth Avenue bag and you’re not sure how to tell if this vintage Louis Vuitton bag is real?

Despite seemingly easy Louis Vuitton fonts, the French brand has used a variety of heat stamps. In this article, we’ll review most of them to learn what vintage items looked like and how to tell if vintage Louis Vuitton is real.

What is Considered Vintage Louis Vuitton?

Before we proceed, let’s define which Louis Vuitton handbags are considered vintage.

Vintage is a generic term for items from a previous era. Vintage literally means ‘of age’, and specific age requirements vary. For instance, antique dealers require an item to be at least 40 years old to fall into the ‘vintage items’ category.

Overall, we feel it makes sense to call a designer purse vintage if it’s over 20 years old. On top of that, this timeframe suggests you may have inherited this item from one of your relatives.

That being said, all French Company items described in this article are considered vintage. If a Louis Vuitton item is from a French Company, it means it’s over 30 years old (and mostly even over 40 years!).

History of The French Company

image courtesy ebay seller vintagesuntreasures

Louis Vuitton French Company bags are extremely rare and valuable, and if you are a collector of Louis Vuitton, we highly recommend investing in some of these pieces, as the values continually increase.

First Louis Vuitton factory, located just northeast of Paris, began operations in 1859, with only 20 staff. Because of the French brand’s rapid growth, Vuitton had to scale his business quickly. By 1900, Vuitton had just under 100 people working for him. By 1914, Vuitton had grown his Asnières workforce to 225 people.

Until 1970s, all Louis Vuitton factories were located in France. However, in the 1970 there was a surge in brand’s popularity in the United States. Louis Vuitton managers quickly grasped that it’s time to take advantage of this business opportunity and were looking for ways to develop the manufacturing cycle in the US.

With that goal in mind, in the 1970s Louis Vuitton developed a relationship with a US Luggage Maker, the French Company.

During a period from around 1976 through 1991, The French Company manufactured Louis Vuitton bags under a special license from Louis Vuitton. These looked a little different from what French bags looked like and had a special paper tag inside that may have looked like this:

The greatest advantage was that The French Company bags were made and sold in the US and Louis Vuitton still could gain a lot from this partnership. Typically, they were sold in more exclusive department stores like Saks Fifth Avenue & Neiman Marcus, along with a few other luxury luggage boutiques such as Myers. Some pieces were even private labeled.

Louis Vuitton Saks Fifth Avenue Bags and Accessories

Interestingly, some of these vintage French company items were manufactured exclusively for Saks 5th Avenue. You can still find these items today on eBay or Poshmark, or in your grandma closet!

Generally, such items use Louis Vuitton canvas and have a special stamp ‘Saks Fifth Avenue’ inside. They won’t show anything related to French Company though. In addition, they don’t have any date codes or serial numbers.

Alternatively, Louis Vuitton Saks Fifth Avenue Bags have an embossing in gold script or a gold plate.

How to Tell if Vintage Louis Vuitton is Real?

Checking vintage items from any brand is a more complicated task than checking the newer handbags due to several reasons.

First, it’s harder to find a vintage item and examine what real French Company handbags look like.

Second, in the past, these bags used a variety of fonts and stamps, which makes authentication even harder. if something is different from the benchmark, you can hardly find out whether it’s due to the item being of age or because it’s fake.

Aside from that, a lot of people ask: are there any fake vintage handbags at all?

Yes. And more than you can imagine.

In general, there are several rules you need to know when trying to estimate whether a vintage handbag is real or fake.

1. Vintage Louis Vuitton bags don’t look like modern bags

If you’re accustomed to newer Louis Vuitton fonts and quality standards, vintage bags will seem to you a little off. Not because they’re of lower quality but because they’re different in pretty much everything.

In addition, keep in mind Louis Vuitton used to be a luggage maker, not a handbag maker. In the 1970s, there were not that many bags in production, and most of them looked more like luggage pieces.

In order to authenticate the styles, you also need to be aware of the fashion back then. Learn more about 1970s women’s fashion.

Thus, if you see a cute clutch or a modern-looking handbag, it may be a counterfeit item.

2. The leather used to be darker

If you mostly have newer handbags in your collection, on thing you should know is that the vachetta was very different on bags from the French Company.

Note that the stitching doesn’t have any yellow shade, unlike modern Louis Vuitton handbags.

3. The hardware used to be different

If you’re looking at a vintage Keepall or Speedy, which were basically the only handbags in production, they didn’t look like modern handbags. For instance, on a zipper puller there used to be a bulky lock.

In addition, 70s bags would often have a kiss lock, which was all the rage at that time.

The French Company used other types of stitching and lining that is different from authentic Louis Vuitton inside lining.

4. There are no date codes or serial numbers

Vintage Louis Vuitton bags manufactured by the French Company have no date codes or serial numbers. They barely have any stamps as these may fade due to aging. The inside paper tag may age too and in many cases these would fall off.

This post is written by Anastasiya (Premium Member) and is shared with her consent. For the original post (same content), please feel free to check her website.

Summary

If you learned something new, share this article!

Recommend0 recommendationsPublished in Authentication, Louis Vuitton

Related Articles

Top 33 Italian Luxury Fashion Brands And Their Prices

From high-end fashion houses to luxury jewelry brands, Italy has made an indelible mark on the global luxury industry. In this blog post, we’ll be exploring the top 33 Italian luxury fashion brands that you need to be aware of if you’re a real fashionista. 

Join us as we take a closer look at each of these iconic brands that have made Italy a name synonymous with luxury. Whether you’re a fashion enthusiast or simply appreciate the finest quality goods, you’ll find something to admire in this definitive guide to the best Italian designer fashion brands. Gucci, Prada, Valentino, Fendi, and more!