Thursday, 11 March 2010
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Newsflash
Thieves attempted a daring robbery early Tuesday at the Dittrich Furs location in Detroit's New Center area.

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Bad news for fur businesses? Moschow without snow! Print E-mail
Thursday, 22 October 2009

 Pigs still can't fly, but this winter, the mayor of Moscow promises to keep it from snowing. For just a few million dollars, the mayor's office will hire the Russian Air Force to spray a fine chemical mist over the clouds before they reach the capital, forcing them to dump their snow outside the city. Authorities say this will be a boon for Moscow, which is typically covered with a blanket of snow from November to March. Road crews won't need to constantly clear the streets, and traffic — and quality of life — will undoubtedly improve.

The idea came from Mayor Yury Luzhkov, who is no stranger to playing God. In 2002, he spearheaded a project to reverse the flow of the vast River Ob through Siberia to help irrigate the country's parched Central Asian neighbors. Although that idea hasn't exactly turned out as planned — scientists have said it's not feasible — this time, Luzhkov says, there's no way he can fail.

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Demand for nutria pelts fades away Print E-mail
Friday, 03 April 2009
 HOUMA - With their oversized orange-tinged incisors, beady eyes and rat-like tails, nutria are not the most endearing animals in the swamp.
But they were once a valued animal, brought to the U.S. from Argentina by businessmen who planned to raise them for their fur and meat. Their coats, which appear slicked back and greasy-looking in the wild, are actually thick and luxurious once cleaned and processed. The fur, similar to beaver, is dense and soft and ranges in color.
If you fancy a nutria fur for yourself, they are still readily available. A search of the online auction site eBay, for example, turned up dozens of women's coats - some made completely of nutria fur and others simply lined or accented with it -- ranging in price from $30 to $1,500. The offerings are proof there was once a demand for the fur. Experts say that was especially true in Russia and Argentina, but with the souring international economy, demand in recent years is slim.
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Ban Baby Seal Hunting Print E-mail
Tuesday, 24 March 2009
Baby Seal

Canada's commercial harp seal hunt started today with a quota of 280,000 seals, only days after Russia decided to ban all hunting of harp seals under one year of age.

Baby seals are being killed on the ice in Canada as you read this - observers from The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) confirmed the first seal death just moments ago.

Observers from HSUS and IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare) are in the air and on the ice, watching the hunt, recording abuses, and campaigning to end this cruelty once and for all.

We here at E-furs.com may adore furs, but we are against Baby Seal Hunting and any fur making that is against the law!

 

 
Why do women wear fur? Print E-mail
Tuesday, 08 July 2008

Since the dawn of time, women have adorned themselves in fur and feathers and for almost as long, men have been debating why.

The female penchant for finery and fashion has spurred countless heated discussions among noblemen and academics. Women have been characterised as sensational, superficial and irrational beings with an inordinate love for ephemeral and fickle fashion. Marxists have accused them of suffering from a ‘false consciousness’ and feminists have pitied their sisters for being the victims of a degrading fashion propagated by capitalism and men eager to exploit them to maximise profits.

But women wear fur and buy Louis Vuitton handbags as a matter of survival, says Erik Hansen-Hansen, a PhD-scholar who recently defended his thesis on luxurious fashion. According to Hansen-Hansen it is simple biology – it is all in the genes. While men can mate and generously spread their genes through vast numbers of women, women only has the capacity to bear a limited number of children. Consequently, from a biological viewpoint, women need to be more discriminate and ensure that she can attract the most able and suitable man to father her children.

In biological wisdom, youthfulness and fertility are a woman’s strongest weapons to attract the opposite sex, and fashion enhances the impression of both, according to Hansen-Hansen. So in order to attract the most suitable man to father her children, women wear fur coats, expensive jewellery and handbags to appear fertile and youthful and to lure, attract and seduce the most attractive men. So far from being exploited victims of fashion, women skilfully use fashion to manipulate men to push through their own genetic strategy!
 
Furs left behind turn into big bargains Print E-mail
Wednesday, 07 May 2008
FAIRFIELD — Joan Fink first tried on one coat, then the other.
Too long. Too dark. Too short.
Then she spied it — a short bomber-style jacket, black mink on one side, black leather on the other.
"I love this," she said as her husband Ron responded, "Then get it."
The Finks, former residents who now live in Jamestown, R.I., had returned to Fairfield to put Joan's fur into storage at Harper's Furs on Black Rock Turnpike. By serendipity, they stumbled into the furrier's sale of mink and leather coats at rock-bottom prices.
The cost of the reversible jacket Joan Fink fell in love with?
A jaw-dropping $147.

All the coats on the three racks were up for sale Tuesday because their owners failed to pay their storage charges. And they were being sold for only the amount of the storage charge that was owed. "People forget, they move," said owner Jerry Gold. "We do this every three, four or five years."
The sale comes after many reminders to the delinquent owners, including phone calls, certified letters and legal notices.
"About a half-dozen showed up to pay" before Tuesday's sale, according to Gold.
What was left was up for grabs.
"This is a very fine mink," Gold said, pulling out a full-length coat. "If we were selling it new, it would cost $3,500 to $4,000." Instead, it was for sale for $247. "You'd spend that on a leather jacket," Gold said.

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