There is nothing worse than realizing that a prized fur coat is torn or damaged somehow. The appearance of a tear in a coats seam or fur collar can be frustrating. Your will garment repaired in the overwhelming number of circumstances. When you need a fur repair, that is our specialty.
Marc Kaufman has a repair facility on-premises. A team of repair specialists work exclusively for Marc Kaufman Furs towards one end only, the reconditioning of your damaged prized fur. In most cases, the Marc Kaufman professional repair staff can restore your furs as close to pristine condition as possible. Depending on the age and severity of the damaged garment you present. We pride ourselves in our attentive nature to whatever your fur needs are.
Feel free to review more information regarding our fur repair services at kaufmanfursonline, Facebook, or Instagram. You will be glad you did!
Marc Kaufman, NY, maintains the highest quality craftsmanship for the very best fur remodeling and fur repairs. Since 1870 the Kaufman Family designing, manufacturing, repairing, and cleaning furs. With this many years of experience, we learned what to do and what not to do. Fur repair NYC location is at 212 West 30th St.
Fur Store NYC
Since 1870 the Marc Kaufman Fur Family (5th Generation) has been manufacturing fur coats, fur jackets, and designing outerwear in NYC. You are designing luxury furs, repairing luxury furs and altering and providing cold fur storage fur cleaning, fur remodeling, and fur repairs for fur stores and individuals. With over 100 years of fur expertise ‘Marc Kaufman Furs ‘A Name You Could Trust for All your Fur Needs.’
Experience Does Matter’
World-renowned for our luxurious furs and craftsmanship, our fur coats worn by socialites, celebrities, hip hop artists, and ordinary people who want to be warm and look beautiful.
Marc Kaufman Furs NY you know that you are getting a quality fur coat, backed by reliability, excellent customer care, and service.
2020 is the year of the contemporary fur. The winter season is in full swing, and the collective fashion consciousness gears towards clothing articles that generate warmth and glamour. Fur enters stage right. Marc Kaufman continues to push the envelope on the fur lifestyle. Their followers are legion and are ever-growing. Our collection of coats has grown exponentially in style and color patterns. The fits are even more precise. The statements are bold.
Sexy in Mink
Furs rock in 2020. Furs continues to rock on our social media sites on Facebook and Instagram. We intend to surround you with the Marc Kaufman fur experience every minute of the day. Our high-quality garments and competitive pricing set us apart from other furriers.
Blue Iris Mink Stroller Silver Fox Collar
Finally, to reiterate, furs rock in 2020. Even our friends over at Rogue Music Store agree (how else do you think we got the guitar in insert pic number 2 ?). So we wade into 2020 full of excitement and a ton of hot looking for all shapes, sizes, and occasions. Men, women, and children comprise our customer base. If we do not have it, we can make it on-premises at our NYC sales store at 212 w 30th street, NY. Come in and see us and rock out with a fur( or two, or three). Marc Kaufman is your destination store for the ultimate experience.
Marc Kaufman, 212 West 30th street,NY,NY,10001, 212-563-3877
Furs have an air of exclusivity. Furs, the ultimate finishing touch for just about any ensemble. They wreak of celebrity status. They do. The politics aside, they are genuinely a status symbol of success and Hollywood glamour. Celebrities in fur is like a hot dog at a baseball game; in a game, you need the dog, and in winter they need their winter wardrobe.
Marc Kaufman has been at the leading edge of representative furs adorned by the celebrity establishment in the United States. Peruse our sites at Kaufman online, www.facebook.com/marckaufman ,www.instagram.com/marckaufmannyc .
Look for the next celebrity fur installments at Marc Kaufman
Fur Fashion Coats is the Perfect Luxury Gift for any special occasion
Black Gray Rex Rabbit Stroller
Fur Fashion amazing. I mean genuinely, they are. There is an all-consuming elegance and practicality to fashion seekers. They are both desired as a luxurious self-indulgence while still be instruments of warmth and covering. A large number of women and men view fashion in the same context.
Two Toned Whiskey Mink Stroller
Fur Fashion
2020 will be a continuation of the fur fashion coats lovers experience. Marc Kaufman will again be at the front of the fur experience. Kaufman online will launch a revised larger than life website in January 2020. Facebook.com/marckaufman and www.Instagram.com/Marc_kaufmanNyc will feature new video installments each month along with current news items relating to the fashion business.
Fur lovers of the world unite and delight.
Marc Kaufman ,212 w30th street,ny,ny,10001,212-563-3877
As we recently learned, the fur industry is booming. Global fur sales rose by 70% from 2000 to 2010. Annual sales of fur pelts reached $15-16 billion, according to the fur industry’s trade association, during the winter of 2010-11 (pelts are sold during a season that runs from around October through March, and the 2010-11 season is the most recent for which figures were available). An industry spokesperson attributed the rise primarily to two factors: designers who have incorporated small amounts of fur into a wider array of garments, making fur an option in warmer climates, and “a younger generation whose passion is not animal rights.”
This development is surprising to anyone who remembers the highly publicized battles over fur and animal welfare of the 1980s and 1990s. Back then, shocking depictions of the cruelty inherent in fur production — often in the form of polemical and, critics said, misleading videos produced by pro-animal-rights fringe groups — were only starting to reach a wider audience. Protesters were omnipresent at fashion week and public pressure to avoid fur was high. Anna Wintour was served a skinned raccoon at the Four Seasons. It seemed like every week another of your favorite celebrities was stripping off for a PETA ad. By turn of the millennium, the moral issue of fur seemed settled, and fur itself seemed like a relic of a bygone age — something that your grandparents’ generation had misguidedly believed was okay, like golliwog dolls or smoking during pregnancy. The idea of wearing something so thoroughly politicized and icky as fur just seemed ugly. Popular culture kept up with the times: when Lily Esposito chided Mary Cherry for her mink coat on Popular, Mary Cherry looked like the spoiled, amoral wench that she was.
But during the 2000s, things changed. Designers who hadn’t previously shown fur on the runway began showing it; designers who had previously shown some, showed more. Designers who had publicly pledged to abjure fur, like Giorgio Armani, went back on their word — as did a good number of those overexposed PETA “faces.” (Naomi Campbell even went so far as to do an ad campaign for the furrier Dennis Basso.) Fur began to creep back into fashion magazine pages. 1990s grunge and minimalism gave way to 2000s bling and ostentation. And now, fur is back in a big way. This year’s fall runways? Among the designers who showed fur and/or shearling were Alexander McQueen, Dolce & Gabbana, Lanvin, Louis Vuitton, Michael Kors, Oscar de la Renta, Prada, Rebecca Minkoff, Salvatore Ferragamo, Tom Ford, Vivienne Westwood, and Yves Saint Laurent.
This reversal is not merely the result of a cultural trend meeting its inevitable backlash. It’s also a story of economics, and of the fur industry’s quiet battle to rebrand its product as sustainable, natural, and luxurious.
Fashion is still a very top-down business. A fur coat in a designer’s fall collection might retail for $10,000 and be ordered by a handful of stores; but that fur coat’s value in visibility for fur as a whole helps sell thousands of $60 rabbit-trimmed Michael Kors hats and $400 coyote-trimmed men’s jackets at Macy’s. To help make fur a trend that pops up in magazine editorials and online, fur suppliers often sponsor designers, giving them free product to incorporate into their seasonal collections and even sending them on junkets. In 2010, the New York Timesreported that one Scandinavian supplier, Saga Furs, gave fur to Cushnie et Ochs, Thakoon, Brian Reyes, Wayne, Derek Lam, Proenza Schouler and Richard Chai. It also paid for three designers to go on a junket:
Last summer, for example, the designers Alexander Wang and Haider Ackermann, plus Alexa Adams and Flora Gill of Ohne Titel were flown to Copenhagen for weeklong visits to the design studios of Saga Furs, a marketing company that represents 3,000 fur breeders in Finland and Norway. Saga Furs regularly sponsors such design junkets.
Another fur supplier, the North American Fur Auctions, gave furs that year to Bibhu Mohapatra and Prabal Gurung. “We want to make sure fur is on the pages of magazines around the world,” said the NAFA’s director of marketing at the time. “The way to do that is to facilitate the use of fur by designers.”
Fur industry organizations sponsor design contests at top fashion schools, including Parsons and the Fashion Institute of Technology. (So does PETA, which enjoyed some institutional support at Parsons back when Tim Gunn was dean of its fashion school.) The prizes are often lavish, including free international travel and tens of thousands of dollars worth of product — perfect for a young designer who needs backing to launch a line. It’s no accident that fur is increasingly present on the runways: the fur industry has spent years patiently working to re-legitimize and de-stigmatize its product in the eyes of a new generation of fashion tastemakers, and fur’s current boom is the fruit of their labors. A 2007 ad campaign even called fur “the natural, responsible choice.” Alice Olivia designer Stacey Bendet, herself a vegan, wears fur and uses it in her collection. “It doesn’t make sense,” she once admitted. “Something about putting it inside me feels really barbaric. Something about wearing it just feels a little glamorous.”
Established designers like Zac Posen now see no downside to collaborating with fur brands — c.f. Posen’s collection for Pologeorgis. Even aseriesofminor scandals over fur labeling hasn’t served to set back the industry.
Five years ago, PETA founder Ingrid Newkirk said that only “old fogey designers like Karl Lagerfeld and so on” used fur, and that fashion’s new generation just wasn’t that into fur. Clearly, Newkirk was wrong.
In the past decade, fur has gone from being a kind of ethical third rail to just one point on the developing moral questionnaire of modern living. Maybe you care more about the environmental degradation, animal cruelty, and labor issues brought up by the leather tanning industry, or factory farms. Perhaps you think nothing of wearing vintage fur because to throw out a useful garment smacks of waste. Maybe you believe, like Silvia Fendi, that real fur is preferable to fake because, as she put it, “We did a collection of fake fur several years ago but found it is the most polluting thing for the environment.” Perhaps you feel a little like Kelis, who concluded a long MySpace rant against PETA by weighing concern over animal welfare to concern for the human beings who toil in sweatshops and in the fields. “Underpaid minorities picking your vegetables, now that’s fine for you right?” asked Kelis. “Don’t waste my time trying to save the dang chipmunk!”
Whatever the case, fur is back in a big way. And it seems to be here to stay for the foreseeable future.
Fur is no longer just for warmth on the coldest of days; furs have moved into the hot “must-have” fashion category and are worn from day to night and across all seasons. The best luxury gift can be purchased at Marc Kaufman Furs of NY.
World-renowned for our luxurious furs and craftsmanship, our fur coats worn by socialites, celebrities, hip hop artists, and people of all walks of life who want to be warm and look beautiful.
Grey Swakara stroller with chinchilla collar and cuff, exclusively from Marc Kaufman Furs.
No dark clouds ever in this Grey Swakara Stroller with Chinchilla Collar and Cuffs from Marc Kaufman Furs New York City kaufmanfurs.com
Since 1870 the Marc Kaufman Fur Family has been manufacturing, designing, repairing, altering, and providing cold storage and fur cleaning for fur stores and individuals. With over 100 years of fur expertise, “Marc Kaufman Furs,” “A name you could trust with all of your fur needs.”
“Experience Does Matter”
World-renowned for our luxurious furs and craftsmanship, our fur coats worn by socialites, celebrities, hip hop artists, and just ordinary people that want to be warm and look beautiful. When you purchase a Marc Kaufman Furs, you know that you are getting quality, reliability, and excellent customer care and service.
large Collection of Furs
Marc Kaufman Furs has the complete selection of the most beautiful fashion furs. Collection of full-length mink coats, mink strollers, mink jackets, fox coats, fox jackets, sable coats, and sable strollers.
For the softest in furs, we have the most beautiful Mink coats, Mink jackets, Chinchilla coats, Chinchilla jackets, Lynx coats, Lynx jackets, Sable coats, Sable Jackets and many other types of fur jackets and fur coats.
A full range of fur colors including mahogany mink, black mink, and whiskey mink. All furs at desirable prices. We can also customize a design to your taste.
Special Orders is our Specialty. We can take a collar from one coat, a sleeve treatment from another jacket, a color from another fur, It”s all your Choice.