Cocktails for Her (Ready-to-Drink Cocktails) - The Newest Fashion Accessory
Published by Karyn Zoldan October 14th, 2006 in Cocktails.This Bud is not for you. Isn’t it about time that the mixed drink makers started marketing cocktails for women so when they get together for soirees without the guys and want some sophisticated sipping.
Cocktails by Jenn is just what the fashionista ordered: A collection of ready-to-drink cocktails, naturally flavored, premium, vodka martinis in four fabulous signature flavors. Wrap your lips around Cosmopolitan, Lemon Drop, Tropical Blue Lagoon, and Appletini, and limited-edition seasonal flavors such as Key Lime and Chocolate Peppermint.
The cocktails are available as four 100 ml single-serve bottles sold in fun, colorful totes designed to look like handbags with a color-coordinated grosgrain ribbon and a collectible, enameled charm featuring a clothes hanger, shoe, martini glass, or heart. The totes retail for about $14.99.
4 Responses to “Cocktails for Her (Ready-to-Drink Cocktails) - The Newest Fashion Accessory”
- 1 Trackback on Oct 30th, 2007 at 5:29 am
I personally love retro anything including retro fashion. Thanks for the post.
I love retro also. I don’t dress that way, except for a few accessories (a many-stranded gold-bead necklace, for example). I admire the guts of women who totally dive into the look.
I love retro too.
I especially love retro jewelry. I was looking for a plastic cherries pin that I thought I had (but couldn’t find) as I felt like dressing up my dog and calling her Carmen MiranDOG. She loves when I put costumes and accessories on her.
While looking through my stuff for the cherries, I found this bracelet that belonged to my mother that is a patent leather like white but it’s plastic or some other material and (no digital camera either) and has these 5 or 6 big daisy-like flowers going around the bracelet with silvery centers. I will have to remember to wear it next summer.
Why do we love retro?
Maybe because that was before everything was made in China? Maybe because people were proud of their products back then?
Maybe because the designs had staying power?