H
- H Alpert Company
- Habit Rouge
- Habit Rouge Sport
- Hadrien Absolu
- Hai Karate
- Halloween Man
- Halston
- Halston "z"
- Halston 1-12
- Halston Man
- Halston Z-14
- Hanae Mori
- Hanae Mori Him
- Happy
- Harley Davidson
- Harley Davidson Cool Spirit
- Harley Davidson Free
- Harley Davidson Hot Road
- Harrods
- Havana
- He Wood
- He Wood Ocean Wet Wood
- He Wood Rocky Mountain Wood
- He Wood Silver Wind Wood
- Heaven
- Hei
- Helmut Lang
- Herbissimo Te Verde
- Heritage
- Hermes
- Hero
- Hero Sports Fragrance
- Heroes
- Herrera Aqua
- Herrera Refreshing Ginger
- Herrera Sensual Vetiver
- High School Musical
- Higher
- Higher Energy
- Hilfiger
- Himalaya
- His 777
- His Destiny
- His Majesty
- His Money
- Ho Hang
- Hodo
- Hollister
- Hollister California
- Hollywood
- Hollywood Playboy
- Homme De Gres
- Homme Exceptionnel
- Homme Neiges
- Honneur
- Horizon
- Hot
- Hot Water
- Houbigant
- Hugh Parsons
- Hugh Parsons Kings Road
- Hugh Parsons Oxford Street
- Hugh Parsons Piccadilly Circus
- Hugh Parsons Yellow
- Hugo
- Hugo Boss
- Hugo Boss Sport
- Hugo Duo
- Hugo Elements
- Hugo Energise
- Hugo Just Different
- Hugo Red
- Hugo Xy
- Hugo Xy Summer
- Hulk
- Hummer
- Hummer H2
- Hypnose
History and background of Gucci
Born in 1881, craftsman’s son Guccio Gucci founded the House of Gucci as a saddlery shop in Florence in 1906. Guccio's first talent was his craftsmanship in leather goods. He started out selling leather bags to horsemen in the 1920’s and progressed to luxury luggage as his clients graduated from equine transportation to horseless carriages. In 1938 Guccio Gucci opened their first retail shop on the Via Condotti in Rome.
In 1947 the immediately recognizable Gucci icon, the leather bag with bamboo handle, is created. During the 1950’s the trademark red striped webbing is introduced, taken from its original form place on a saddle girth. This became an emblem much as the leather moccasin with leather bit.
Guccio Gucci created many of his classics early during the 1950’s; products such as luggage, ties, shoes, and the famous handbags sporting the bamboo handle. After his death in 1953, his family was able to take the enormously successful company to new heights by opening stores in Paris, Beverly Hills, London, Palm Beach, and Tokyo. The 1960’s brought increased fame to the Gucci Empire. Such Hollywood stars as Grace Kelly, Peter Sellers and Audrey Hepburn made the name Gucci synonymous with “chic”. Jackie Kennedy helped by being photographed with the Gucci shoulder bag, which subsequently became known as the “Jackie O”. The company adopts the “GG” logo.
But with the fame and recognition of the brand name came some turmoil. While Gucci goods were considered a status symbol of the times, management and inner family seemed to disagree. Brother Maurizio Gucci took an apparently ailing business over from his founding brother, who in turn sold it to an Arab concern in the 80’s.
In the 1990’s, Tom Ford, Gucci’s newest executive head, has brought Gucci back to the center of chic, and now commands a varied line of products including leather fashions, perfumes, colognes, cosmetics, shoes (including the moccasin with the distinctive Gucci snaffle-bit), the "Flora" foulard created for Grace Kelly by Rodolfo Gucci, suitcases, watches, jewelry, silk scarves, sports articles, belt clasps (the one with the Guccio Gucci initials, was introduced 1964), ties, and eyeglasses.
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