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baroque prada they do it. For Laura Lee Williams, having a "Made in America" label on her designer handbags is a matter of pride. Sticking to that policy has paid off for the company, whose colorful beaded bags have hung off the arms of Miss America, Kate Winslet and Eva Longoria on an episode of "Desperate Housewives."What inspired you to start this business? I wanted to create something unique and different, even if it was just for my friends and relatives. Then one day I just had the right tools design and beadwork, and I had really neat material. I took my design to an artisan and together we made the first prototype. One thing led to another, and I ended up with a fun, quirky handbag, and that is what started my collection.What made you decide to focus on handbags? I always loved having a statement piece, whether it was a brooch, necklace or handbag. I truly was never infatuated with just handbags. It all came together with that first design and I realized then and there that there is no way I cannot explore the startup. only? In the beginning, I was building things offshore, but it bothered me that I wasn't doing it over here because people needed to work. was in the forefront of my mind. I find that where there is a will, there is a way. It has been a labor of love.How high will they goAt six and seven inches, heels have seldom been higher or more impossible to wear. So why are women snapping them up? And have high heels hit the heights?Absolutely, says Jeanne Beker, style savvy host of CTV's Fashion Television."I think we saw that coming a few seasons ago, where we saw the sculptural shoe and the shoe as objet d'art," Beker says, referring to Manolo Blahnik's revolutionary heel less "Bhutan" design in 2006, which is balanced entirely on an S spring in the arch. "I'd say we've reached the zenith of height."Certainly, catwalk models have been doing spectacular faceplants while tottering on Alexander McQueen shoes so vertiginous the girls might as well be en pointe in ballet shoes. They would probably have been more comfortable, too.But judging by what's sashayed off the catwalk and into the stores this season, real women are lapping it up. Pace setting designer Christian