World's Smallest,Designed By MSCHF Bag Is Auctioned Today At 51 Lakh Indian Rupees!
World’s smallest bag was sold in Auction it is in green color having micro dimensions with yellow patchs you can see the size of bag even smaller than a piece of Rice people are very exciting about this bag
As MSCHF goes big (red, and boot), and Other Fashion Iconic Items it's willing to go small. Meet the MSCHF Microscopic Handbag, a nearly invisible little speck that's actually a remarkably accurate rendering of a Louis Vuitton OnTheGo handbag.
How small are we talking?
Well, MSCHF's Microscopic Handbag measures about 657 by 222 by 700 micrometers. Forget head of a pin — we're talking about dimensions comparable to a single strand of human hair.
And, yet, MSCHF was able to carve a remarkably accurate Louis Vuitton monogram across the Microscopic Handbag, which will be pre-mounted beneath a digital microscope so that its new owner will actually be able to appreciate the detail.
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MSCHF
Not that MSCHF is selling the Microscopic Handbag through its conventional channels. MSCHF specifically created the lil' Louis for the "Just Phriends" sale, a forthcoming auction curated for Pharrell's JOOPITER auction house by longtime pal and colette co-founder Sarah Andelman.
MSCHF's Microscopic Handbag will be offered alongside one-off creations made exclusively for "Just Phriends" by the likes of Chanel, KAWS, Richard Mille, and Louis Vuitton itself, though MSCHF told the New York Times that it did not get permission from LV for its Microscopic Handbag.
Auction of Smallest Bag Size Around A Rice
A promotional photo shows the design in greater detail, revealing Louis Vuitton’s signature “LV” monogram. The bag appears to be based on the French label’s OnTheGo tote, which currently retails at full size for between $3,100 and $4,300.
The sale was hosted by Joopiter, an online auction house founded by American musician, record producer and designer Pharrell Williams. Although Williams currently serves as Louis Vuitton’s creative director of menswear, MSCHF’s chief creative officer Kevin Wiesner previously told the New York Times that the collective had not sought his or the French label’s permission to use its logo or design.
“Pharrell loves big hats, so we made him an incredibly small bag,” he told the newspaper.
Founded in 2016, MSCHF has made headlines with its so-called “drops,” irreverent art projects that often poke fun at — while profiting from — consumer capitalism. The group was infamously sued by Nike over its “Satan Shoes,” a series of 666 pairs of modified Nike sneakers featuring satanic symbols and drops of real human blood. The dispute was eventually settled out of court.
Known for teasing the art world for its excesses — whether selling forged Andy Warhol drawings or cutting up Damian Hirst paintings — the collective has also turned its attention to luxury fashion.
In 2021, the group ripped up four Birkin handbags to create sandals (dubbed “Birkinstocks”) that it offered for up to $76,000 a pair. More recently, its cartoonish rubber boots, known as “Big Red Boots,” became a viral sensation after being worn by stars including Doja Cat, Iggy Azalea and Janelle Monáe.
Prior to this week’s sale, MSCHF declined to answer CNN’s questions on the creation of its handbag. However, a statement published alongside the auction listing posited that the fashion industry’s love of small bags had seen them “steadily more abstracted” to the point that the accessory is “purely a brand signifier.”
“Previous small leather handbags have still required a hand to carry them — they become dysfunctional, inconveniences to their ‘wearer,’” the statement added. “‘Microscopic Handbag’ takes this to its full logical conclusion. A practical object is boiled down into jewelry, all of its putative function evaporated; for luxury objects, usability is the angels’ share.”