Archive for the 'laga handbags' Category

Published by Louise on 24 Jun 2008

Gifts & Decorative Accessories Magazine features Laga Handbags

Laga Handbags’s first showing at Dallas Market Center:

Laga Designs Intl. showed a collection of truly eye-catching handbags, wallets and small personal accessories. All of the bags are made by survivors of the Banda Aceh, Indonesia tsunami and all proceeds go back to support the workers and help to rebuild the communities. The bags feature intricate embroidery patterns that are indigenous designs and generally not widely seen previously by the outside world. The designs are crafted by the workers using foot-powered sewing machines. The bags all have a high fashion look and include interior pockets and compartments. Husband and wife team, Roy and Louise van Broekhuizen, owners of the company take no salaries from the business, preferring the monies to be returned to benefit the tsunami survivors in Roy’s native Indonesia. But this is a business they state emphatically, not a charity. [read entire article]

Published by Roy on 15 Jun 2008

U.S. Chamber of Commerce article about Laga Handbags

From Disaster Comes Opportunity


The van Broekhuizen’s handbag business offers economic opportunity for Indonesian tsunami victims.

Laga Designs International, Inc., is a business with a mission. When Roy van Broekhuizen went to Indonesia as a relief coordinator after the 2004 tsunami, he saw scene after scene of total devastation-homes wiped out, schools and businesses flattened, and families fractured. But it was the survivors who affected him the most. “You would see them sitting on the floor, just traumatized. They had lost everyone and everything,” van Broekhuizen says.

When van Broekhuizen’s contract with his church’s relief service ended in February 2006, he and his wife, Louise, vowed that they would do anything they could to help the survivors of Banda Aceh, Indonesia, and the local economy. They found their solution in the one-of-a-kind embroidered handbags that Louise had purchased in the village. Encouraged by the interest that Louise’s bags were generating in their hometown of Santa Ana, California, the van Broekhuizens held a party at their condo and sold $2,000 worth of bags.

Soon, the van Broekhuizens were receiving via airmail up to 11 boxes of handbags at a cost of $250 per box. The couple brought in their first 40-foot shipping container of bags in August 2007. They have on hand as many as 6,000 handbags and 33 consultants to sell the bags through home parties. Laga handbags are also sold in area boutiques, at booths at accessories trade shows, and on e-retailer eBags.com. “We’re showing people something they’ve never seen before,” says Roy. “Each handbag is a piece of art.”

One hundred percent of Laga Designs’ profits go back into the business, including renting production facilities overseas and paying wages for 150 tsunami survivors in Banda Aceh. Laga Designs’ products, which also include belts, wallets, and travel duffels, incorporate native patterns passed down from generation to generation. Even the name of the van Broekhuizen’s company is indigenous–Laga is a variation of the Acehnese word for beautiful–and each product line is given an Acehnese word.

The van Broekhuizens are trying to balance their explosive growth with their current inventory. “We don’t know what’s going to sell, so we have to juggle all the different styles, colors, and sizes,” Roy explains. With a supplier half a world away, filling orders quickly can present challenges. For example, with eBags, the couple has to ship an order within 48 hours. “We’re trying to get warehouse space. We can’t work out of our garage anymore.”
The growing pains are worth it, according to Roy. “To see those women now, how they are so empowered–it gives us all hope. We do our little part to help people, and it makes us realize how lucky we are.”

Originally published June 2008. Reprinted by permission, uschamber.com, June 2008. Copyright©2008, U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Published by Roy on 05 Jun 2008

Smithsonian considering Laga handbags for its catalogs

June 4th, 2008, 9:30 am · Post a Comment · posted by Hang Nguyen
laga.jpg

An Irvine company’s handbags may land in the Smithsonian Christmas and/or jewelry catalogs.

Laga Designs International’s five purses and a wallet have passed a pre-selection stage for the catalogs, said Danette Nguyen, assistant buyer for the Smithsonian catalogs.

The products in the Smithsonian catalogs are picked because they relate in some way to its museums’ collections. That allows it to keep its non-profit status.

The Laga bags will relate to the Asian ethological collection at the National Museum of Natural History. The collection comprises of 30,000 objects from Southeast Asia, Nguyen said.

The Laga bags are handmade by more than 150 tsunami victims in Aceh, the Indonesian province that was destroyed by the earthquake and subsequent tidal waves on Dec. 26, 2004.

The nearly three-year-old Laga business allows founder Roy Van Broekhuizen, pictured above, to reconnect with his childhood. His family, part Dutch and part Indonesian, fled Indonesia when heharapan-handbag_l.jpg was 9.

A Smithsonsian buyer came across the Laga handbags at a trade show in Las Vegas.

The institution plans to sell these pieces from $30 to $140, slightly higher than what they go for on Laga’s Web site. The Harapan “Hope” purse, pictured right, which Laga retails from $130 to $190, is one of the bags Smithsonian is considering.

The local company will find out in about two to three weeks whether it made the final cut for the Smithsonsian catalogs that arrive in homes in October, Nguyen said.

(Register photo of Van Broekhuizen and his wife Louise with their bags. Other photo from Laga Web site.)

Published by Roy on 23 May 2008

Laga Handbags in Long Beach 5/25/08

19th Annual Holland Festival
Sunday, May 25, 2008

Gemmrig Park, Long Beach, California

NL Flag

Laga Handbags will have 2 booths at this festival,

please come and visit us.

Laga handmade handbags, fashion handbags, beaded bags and travel bags are unique

Roy & Louise van Broekhuizen
Annual Holland Festival 2008, Gemmrig Park, Long Beach

Laga handmade handbags, fashion handbags, beaded bags and travel bags are unique

Published by Roy on 16 May 2008

Laga Handmade Handbags Makes Top 10

By Susan Breslow Sardone, About.com

Regardless of whether you will be a bride at home or a destination wedding, you’ll need a bag to carry the essentials — tissues, lipstick, safety pins. You won’t want to hold the bag at the ceremony (turn it over to the maid of honor or a witness). But after the vows, you may want to keep the handbag nearby.

The best bride bags are small and match or complement the dress the bride wears. The bag should also fasten securely, just in case a guest wants to slip the bride a cash present.

Laga Handbags came in at #4…..

4. Helping Hands Bag for a Bride

Laga Design International bags are embroidered handbags handcrafted by tsunami survivors of Banda Aceh, Indonesia. Made of nylon, polyester, and cotton threads, this silvery clutch bag is woven in a flowery pattern native to Aceh province. It measures 10″ x 5.5″ x 0.5″ and has an optional 21″ strap. As a bonus, the bag comes with matching earrings that a bride can wear on her wedding day knowing she has helped the victims of disaster.

Read the entire article here!!!


Published by Roy on 14 May 2008

How To Buy Gorgeous Handmade Handbags

Gorgeous Handmade Handbags from Indonesia: A Buyer’s Guide

When it comes to fashion handbags, the cookie-cutter variety are a dime a dozen. Thousands of them are produced in factories and sold in every town. But handmade handbags are delightful, rare treasures that any woman can be proud of. When a handbag is handmade, it is unique in many ways and reflects the skill and creativity of its maker. Many women in Indonesia choose to hand-stitch handbags to earn a living for their families. Their handbags are beautifully embroidered with amazing designs, but yet they usually possess the same or better quality as any factory-made handbag.

If you’re just yearning to own an elaborate - but unusual - handbag, here are some great tips. Let’s explore what types of Indonesian handbags are available and how to choose the right one for you.

Look for Practicality

Before falling in love with a certain design, be sure the handbag will meet your everyday needs. Do you need the handbag for work or play? Do you plan on using it every day or only for special evenings out on the town? Also, consider how many items you will need to carry in the handbag. Handmade handbags come in a variety of sizes and shapes. They range from petite to very large travel handbags. Some come with shoulder straps while others have hand straps. There are even very small make-up carriers for trips. It depends on how and where you plan to use it.

Choosing a Design and Color for Your Handmade Handbag

Handmade handbags come with a variety of styles and designs. Embroidery is used to create unique patterns such as diamonds, curved lines, circles, stars, and floral patterns. Indonesian handbags are often creatively labeled to express the type of design and color on the handbag. The words gift, live, great, eternal, recover, morning, believe, and so forth reflect the personality behind the purse as well as the style and color. Choose a style that matches several of your outfits, or that blends well with your body shape and hairstyle or color.

For spring and summer, there are colors such as red, cream, light blue, or olive. For fall and winter, colors such as black, dark brown, dark blue, and silver are excellent choices.

Help those in Need with Charity Bags

Another option to consider when buying an Indonesian handmade handbag is to shop for charity bags (or charity purses). Charity bags are made by those in Indonesia who need the money for daily food and supplies. Some companies in the United States offer to buy the handbags and resell them to Americans or through the Internet. A few companies will even train the workers and provide sewing and embroidery supplies to work with. One such company is Laga Handbags (online), which helps women who were survivors of the tragic tsunami of 2006 in Sumatra, Indonesia. The women workers of Indonesia are able to learn skills for a lifetime while providing a valuable service to handbag lovers.

When choosing a company for handmade handbags, research online to find companies that offer authentic Indonesian handbags, not replicas. The real handmade handbags are usually priced from $35 up to $150, depending on the style and size of the bag. Companies should provide detailed information about how and where the handbags are obtained, and where the company is located. Look for companies that are up-front about their procedures and customer policies.

A handmade handbag from Indonesia can also be a memorable surprise as a gift for Mother’s Day, Christmas, birthdays, or other occasions. The handbags are reliable and affordable, and the remarkable craftsmanship of Indonesian women makes them highly desirable in the fashion world. Go online today to find that perfect handmade handbag for you!

To learn more about subjects like handmade handbags please visit the web site at: http://www.laga-handbags.com/handbags.html

For more information and informative related articles and links about this subject matter and content, please visit Majon’s Clothing Accessories directory: http://www.majon.com/directory/Clothing_Accessories

About the Author

Chris Robertson is a published author of Majon International. All Rights Reserved. Copyright 2007 (Thu May 08 2008) Majon International. Majon International is one of the worlds MOST popular internet marketing and internet advertising companies on the web. Visit their main business resource web site at: http://majon.com

Published by Roy on 30 Apr 2008

Laga Handbags Mother’s Day Boutique 5/3/08

Laga Mother’s Day Boutique 2008

Click here for directions

You can read our story at http://www.laga-handbags.com/about.html

Check out our blog at www.laga-handbags.com/events

“…when you buy a Laga bag you’re not just getting a beautiful handbag, you’re investing in the future of a precious life..”

Published by Louise on 21 Apr 2008

Pauley Perrette (NCIS) buys Laga handbags

Pauley Perrette plays “Abby” on television’s NCIS buys Laga handbags in support of tsunami survivors

Pauley Perrette, who plays “Abby” on television’s NCIS, was touched by the Laga story we presented at Hollywood United Methodist Church in answer to their gracious invitation. We were blessed with Pauley and her personal assistant, Angela Garver, who purchased Laga handbags to show their support for the work we are doing in Aceh.

Pauley is shown above with her purchase of the “Rajin” and “Kuat” travel bags and “Apas” shoulder bag (not shown), while Angela purchased the “Sehat” and “Kasih” handbags.

Thank you, Pauley and Angela, for helping us to bring hope to victims of the 2004 tsunami!

Published by Roy on 02 Apr 2008

Laga handbags manager demonstrating in Las Vegas

Our manager/trainer, Hana

Check out this video of our manager Hana using the single head, treadle Singer sewing machine making one of our Laga handbags:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tcy2dse68M&feature=related

Published by Roy on 02 Apr 2008

Villagers making Laga handbags in Sumatra, Indonesia

Empowering Women 

Here is video from Louise’s trip to Aceh province, where our Laga handbags are made by our Acehnese friends:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzwkmpsmKbo&feature=related

Next »