A few thoughts
Made in US, taking another look : Xenophobia or importance of maintaining basic skills?
Today, the front page of the newspaper declared that more companies
are looking to re-start domestic manufacturing after analyzing their costs for importing products with increased transportation costs. These companies, who only a short time earlier, found it convenient to sell their plants and put their workers out of jobs, are now faced with lack of options domestically, both for manufacturing and raw materials.
Tucker and Bloom, a bag company helping people organize their life and technical gear, with style. A start-up company based in Nashville, TN with deep roots in the bag industry (25+ years as a designer both domestically and internationally), is choosing to manufacture domestically from it’s beginning. True, manufacturing products here means a higher unit costs for labor, until the cost of transportation and unsold inventory do away with profit.
Musings on Bag Design
Once upon a time, when this bag designer was just a novice, I used to look at the master pieces put out by Judith Lieber, Myers and a bunch of manufacturers that were well grounded in construction, with awe. Today, I see a field of sewn containers with little imagination, slight differences with interchangeable labels.
Perhaps, one might say I have been in the bag business too long or that I have seen it all before. Design is cyclical, repeating over time or drawing inspiration from the past. The consumer doesn’t gravitate to great leaps in design or at least it seems to me that changes in design trends are more incremental.
Kudos, to Crumpler, Maderina Duck for daring to be different.
Rest in peace James Yancey Jay Dee
- Aug 24, 2009
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I caught this delivery truck heading North on Broad St today. I liken it to a mobile memorial, although I think it was just the company name. It has been a couple of years since his passing, and although his legacy lives on, it is important to remember why. As often happens after an artists death Dilla has become an icon. His image has been plastered on t-shirts, and rappers from here to Tokyo are using his beats in all manor of ways. Don’t get me wrong, I feel its important to celebrate the man’s life, and I am a fan. I just feel, being that Dilla is not around to collect, or keep tabs on what is becoming of his music shouldn’t give everyone a free pass.It cheapens his catalog. That being said….Pay Jay….or Ma Dukes…or AT LEAST the Lupus Foundation.
Learn about Dilla here
Need room for records? Bring your North to South Messenger bag out digging. I find its just big enough to buy what I need, and not the whole store. There is a clear difference, but at times I “need” to fit about 30 records, and ride a bike.
The Bag Messenger: Short on bus fare?

Room for tools and the cash- The Bag Messenger
East to West Messenger.
Making sure you have what you need when you need it can can be crucial. Having the right bag, and staying organized is key. Check out our line of lifestyle bags for work, here, and check out our travel accessories here
urban wonderland
Artist installations in the streets of Washington DC. You never know what you might see. Make sure you have your camera with our Mini Messenger Bag
Installations in the nations capital



Some thoughts for the day….
Some of the many things preventing cut and sew entrepreneurs in the US from pursuing their vision is the minimal amount of domestic contractors, available raw material and technical construction knowledge. I would like to propose the creation of regional cut and sew manufacturing co-ops, the highest level of machinery (CNC cutting and sewing machines).
Manufacturing is most efficient and profitable when it is done at full capacity. Start-up companies as a rule are undercapitalized and can ill afford high inventory costs
Introduction
Introduction
I have for the past twenty plus years been an observer, participant and over the top bagologist (lover of all things pertaining to bags). While working as a design consultant and in-house designer I have had a front row seat to the decline of the US manufacturing business of all types of sewn bags. My mentors in the business have been a generation of European immigrants, some survivors of Hitler’s wrath, others just transplants with skills that are rapidly becoming scarce in the US.
In my twenties I started a handbag company. Luck and youth was with me, department stores and better boutiques saw my products as saleable, so I had some degree
of success .As my vision and understanding of bag construction became a fusion of classical European construction mixed with off-beat American handbag funk and style.
Flash-forward to the present, I am starting this dialogue about design and this point in the timeline of bag history, musings on the state of the industry and my own hopes for the future, as well as creating a medium for anyone wanting to learn or share thoughts on bags, design or opportunities in the industry.
QLOCKTWO Designer clock
- Aug 19, 2009
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qlocktwo.com

This gadget spells out the time in five min intervals. A cleaner way to count from a sharp looking time piece.
Shave off those extra min’s, and save yourself some personal time. While your at it, buy one of our mini messenger bags so you don’t spend the rest of your day hunting for your keys.
Take %10 percent off any purchase at http://www.tucker-bloom.com
Use coupon cb060184 at checkout.
45 Audio Station
Thought this looked interesting…


“Designed for a club owner a while ago, the “45 Audio Station” by Chicago-based designer Christian Castro is a DJ table with an integrated vinyl case to rock the dance floor. The name 45 has a dual meaning derived from the 45 record speed and the design’s resemblance to a handgun. The audio station is made of epoxy, concrete and steel, materials dictated by the design and a turntable’s operational requirement of no movement or vibration. The vertical element of the design is cast concrete connected to the horizontal element, which is made of molded foam. Both the vertical and horizontal elements are coated in glossy resin. The horizontal element is ridged and light, while the vertical element is heavy and immobile. The entire unit is bolted through the club floor”-www.thedesignblog.org
KITCHEN SINK
- Aug 16, 2009
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We are starting a new monthly party here in Philly. Its called Kitchen Sink.
A Mad Decent Block Party
- Aug 16, 2009
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Yesterday marked the second annual MAD DECENT records block party on 12th St here in Philadelphia. Sign’s around the neighborhood boasted “Free Everything” and to be honest I didn’t feel the event lacked accouterments in any way. There was a dunk tank to keep the air misty, a ball pit for the little ones, and a large grip of DJ’s doing the damn thing. Combine that with a fully catered meal, and all the red bull a respecting person can drink and you’ve got an official good time. I was there throughout the day (I live on the block), and got some photo’s for you to check out. Just turn on some Major Lazer or MIA first to help set the vibe.


Major Lazer prefers Pepsi

A “Michael Vick”, the newest addition to the Eagles was there to show support, and wrestle women.


DJ AYRES Repping FRANK151


DIPLO surveys the scene from atop the Mausoleum
Take %10 percent off any purchase at www.tucker-bloom.com
Use coupon cb060184 at checkout.
Tucker & Bloom Prove E-Commece is the way to go for smart looking bags
- Aug 03, 2009
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Nashville Style in the BAG
David Bloom and his son Case definitely have the best-looking bags in J.J.'s coffee shop on Broadway- this despite the fact that we're surrounded by Vandy students and young professionals with their designer-brand briefcases and laptop totes. Boom's been a "bag nut" for years, and says the first time he ever worked with a hide of leather he felt like he'd been reborn. In the early 70's he befriended a Greek handbag-maker while living in Boston and studied the traditional craft with him and other skilled European artisans there and New York, knowing it was what he was meant to do,
From these experts he learned the fine art of leather-crafting, based on complex European techniques passed down over decades. "I leaned from a lot of the old school guys in the industry in New York" says Bloom. "I worked side by side with the last of a dying breed, many of them survivors of the concentration camps, who do things in a way we don’t in this country today".
His son and business partner Case interrupts, reminding me that true craftsmanship is a fading art, and that the few people who still practice those old skills have an obligation to take back what bags once were from the hands of the mass manufacturers and return them to a level of high craftsmanship and durability. Which s exactly what their company, Tucker & Bloom, aims to do.
Bloom has built a long career on his bag design and construction skills. His first company, Bloom Fine Leather Accessories, produced a much-in-demand roll-top bag that made the New York Times fashion section and sold at Macy's. Henri Bendel, Saks and Neiman Marcus. The small company (Bloom, his wife Dru and one additional employee) eventually closed when the births of their children Case and Maddie meant the couple couldn't keep up with demand. During that period Bloom began working with handbag companies including Etra, Sirco International, L.J. Simone and Ishihara Industries, which held the licenses for Courreges and Valentino. In the 1990's the family moved to Nashville, where Bloom headed the design team for Hartmann Luggage for five years. Independently, he's designed for Valentino and Perry Ellis, at one point moving back to New York to work for Coach, heading their travel line in 2000. Following 9/11 the travel industry slumped, however , and Bloom left Coach.
In 2006, Bloom and his now- grown son decided to give it another go family-style and started Tucker & Bloom (Tucker is Dru Bloom's family name and Case's middle name). Together, they decided to capitalize on David's exceptional design and construction skills and MTSU grad Case's promotional abilities, building a middleman-free business in Nashville. The Key is e-commerce, which allows them to reach out to the community, craftsman to buyer, in the old world tradition-just online instead of in a private atelier.
The target audience for the bags is wide, though common traits are discerning taste and the desire to differentiate themselves from the herd. Bag designs are separated by lifestyle needs - work, leisure or travel. Styles are not gender-specific; there's something to appeal to every customer. Fabrics are both sturdy and attractive, with leather, cotton canvas and ballistic nylon in a wide assortment of colors. Lush trim like calf-skin is obtained as food by-product from the agriculture industry. Checking out the website, you'll find an exciting assortment of messenger bags, laptop cases and other bags suited to all urban and suburban professionals. Neoprene product lines focusing on travel and leisure are expected to be available shortly.
The Blooms are hoping their band becomes something the public is looking for, and there's every reason to believe that's possible. The next step online will allow customers to customize each bag's color and materials. There's no question that e-commerce has changed the way we live and buy, and Tucker & Bloom provide an example of the best sort of e-business. They make cutting edge products available to the public without a middleman, working from a very forward-looking model even as they revisit the old values of craftsmanship and design. No brand name can give you that.
Published in Nashville Lifestyle Magazine June 2008 - By Stephanie Stewart
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