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Luxury retail is in the midst of a reinvention. Circular fashion has moved from trend to transformation, reshaping how consumers perceive value, ownership, and access. According to the 2025 BCG × Vestiaire Collective Resale Report, the secondhand fashion and luxury market now totals $210 to $220 billion globally and is projected to reach $320 to $360 billion by 2030—growing nearly three times faster than the primary market. Among Gen Z consumers, as much as 45% of handbags are already purchased secondhand, underscoring a generational shift toward sustainability and individuality.
As resale evolves from online auctions to a global force redefining modern luxury, how are pioneers navigating the next chapter—and what can established brands learn from their playbook?
On this episode of Retail Refined, host Melissa Gonzalez sits down with Sarah Davis, Founder and President of Fashionphile, to explore how one of the earliest luxury resale pioneers scaled an eBay side hustle into a global platform for pre-owned luxury. From cultural shifts to omnichannel strategy, Davis shares what keeps Fashionphile and the handbags it curates, iconic.
Key Takeaways from the Episode
Sarah Davis founded Fashionphile in 1999 after recognizing that luxury handbags held their value better than any other resale category. Trained in law, she transformed a one-woman eBay storefront into one of the largest platforms for buying and selling ultra-luxury handbags and accessories, headquartered in San Diego and New York City with operations in Tokyo and retail locations across the U.S. Davis spearheaded initiatives including The Book of Iconic Bags, the company’s partnership with ambassador Nicole Richie, and new verticals such as the Investment Protection line and Parker West, Fashionphile’s curated estate-jewelry brand.
By MarketScale5
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Luxury retail is in the midst of a reinvention. Circular fashion has moved from trend to transformation, reshaping how consumers perceive value, ownership, and access. According to the 2025 BCG × Vestiaire Collective Resale Report, the secondhand fashion and luxury market now totals $210 to $220 billion globally and is projected to reach $320 to $360 billion by 2030—growing nearly three times faster than the primary market. Among Gen Z consumers, as much as 45% of handbags are already purchased secondhand, underscoring a generational shift toward sustainability and individuality.
As resale evolves from online auctions to a global force redefining modern luxury, how are pioneers navigating the next chapter—and what can established brands learn from their playbook?
On this episode of Retail Refined, host Melissa Gonzalez sits down with Sarah Davis, Founder and President of Fashionphile, to explore how one of the earliest luxury resale pioneers scaled an eBay side hustle into a global platform for pre-owned luxury. From cultural shifts to omnichannel strategy, Davis shares what keeps Fashionphile and the handbags it curates, iconic.
Key Takeaways from the Episode
Sarah Davis founded Fashionphile in 1999 after recognizing that luxury handbags held their value better than any other resale category. Trained in law, she transformed a one-woman eBay storefront into one of the largest platforms for buying and selling ultra-luxury handbags and accessories, headquartered in San Diego and New York City with operations in Tokyo and retail locations across the U.S. Davis spearheaded initiatives including The Book of Iconic Bags, the company’s partnership with ambassador Nicole Richie, and new verticals such as the Investment Protection line and Parker West, Fashionphile’s curated estate-jewelry brand.