Aquamarine Beachwear Accessories


K Jacques

K Jacques sandals were first created in a small shop in St.Tropez back in 1933, by Mr. and Mrs. Jacques Kéklikian. Each shoe was made to measure, and it wasn't long after the couple set up shop that the who's-who of the jet set discovered their small workshop and the shoes became a French Riviera summer staple. Still family owned, K Jacques sandals are as essential to summer dressing as a favorite pair of jeans or white T-shirt.
Jamin Puech

Jamin Puech

Bags are the perfect fashion item for Isabelle's and Benoit's fitting creative world; their shape, materials, textures and ornaments allow this young couple to express their creativity and imagination freely. Whilst retaining its own identity, the trade mark Jamin Puech relies heavily on new inspirations that creates real surprise and incites people to buy. It builds up the company image in the world of fashion. They happily mix past and present, western world fashion with other cultures, precious and sophisticated, their bags can also express humour and joy. Travels, African, Asian or American cultures, libraries, antique shops, flee markets, conversations with artists or other fashion designers. All could be source of inspiration. Without limits, evening and day hand bags exist in thousands of shapes and forms: purses, pouches, reticules, shopping bags, clutch bags, bags or satchels.

Ray-Ban

Ray-Bans were created in 1937. Some years earlier, Lieutenant John MacCready returned from a balloon flying adventure and complained that the sun had permanently damaged his eyes. He contacted Bausch & Lomb asking them to create sunglasses that would provide protection and also look elegant. Aviator sunglasses, are a style of sunglasses that were developed and branded as Ray-Ban. They are characterized by dark, often reflective lenses having an area two or three times the area of the eye socket, and metal frames with bayonet earpieces or flexible cable temples that hook behind the ears. The original design featured G-20 tempered glass lenses, i.e., neutral gray, transmitting 20% of incoming light. The large lenses are not flat but slightly convex. The design attempts to cover the entire range of the eye and prevent as much light as possible from entering the eye socket from any angle.