Falls wrap halter top on Hautelook (was $220, now $50)
We've rounded up four of the most useful online discount destinations on the Web, the ones that tempt us daily, and those with which we've actually had success.
Check them out.
If small, up-and-coming indie labels are your thing, you must head over
Best of all, Joan (a self-proclaimed shopaholic) deals directly with the designers, which means buying with her helps these small businesses thrive .
I wrote about Shop it to Me last spring, before Shine was even alive. Since then I've bought a ton of things from my daily email alerts—including several dirt-cheap pieces from the gap and a deeply discounted Rachel Palley dress I wore to a wedding. Here was my write up last year:
The set up is this: You sign-up and choose your preferences (women's, men's, girls' or boys' items), select the brands you're interested in (there are hundreds of options, ranging from Prada to Free People), click on the kinds of pieces you want (dresses, bags) and plug in your sizes. The company will then email you daily or weekly—your choice—whenever it finds something that fits your specifications. Other useful tools include letting you pick a price cap for all your pieces, and a "take a break" function for if (and when?) things get really out of control.
Gilt Groupe is the fanciest and most exclusive of all of the sites I've mentioned so far. It's a private, members-only spot that you can only access if you've been invited to join (however, I think I found a loophole—it appears as if you can become a member by emailing them here). Once you're in however, the membership is free and includes 70 percent savings on big-time lines like Chloe, Marc Jacobs, Gucci, and Marchesa.
I haven't tried them yet, but my serious fashionista friends swear by this spot. Take a look at gilt.com