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prada saffiano leather handbag teenage cast. Velouria owner Tes De Luna says the assistant mentioned that she was working on a movie, but didn't say which one. The assistant "commented that the bag could work," De Luna says. Bowlds ended up having to pull another bag off the shelves at Velouria to match the rings, finished the duplicate that night, and sent it the next day. That was when she found out it was for a vampire movie called Twilight."I didn't know what Twilight was," says Bowlds, laughing. "I was thinking low budge."Bowlds is a freelance graphic designer who started making bags in 2005 as part of a joint venture with her friend Nicole Sarsfield, a screen printer. The bags are a passion, and also a way of supplementing the money Bowlds makes doing things like ad design for various firms. She started out sewing canvas and cloth bags and purses, but soon bought an industrial sewing machine and got into leather bags, wallets, and iPod cozies. After shipping what would become the Bella Bag, she decided to switch to recycled leathers, picking up old leather coats at thrift stores and turning them into accessories. "She was like, 'Did you know that was the movie the bag was in?'" De Luna explains. "It's definitely exciting."De Luna called Bowlds and told her the bag was in the movie. Bowlds says she didn't really know what Twilight was and called her sister, a librarian, to find out. Not wanting to cough up the money to see it in theaters, she waited until it came out on DVD last month, expecting little more than a quick shot of her bag being toted by a minor character. But then there it was on the arm of Bella, the film's female lead played by Kristen Stewart. The vampire object of Bella's affection doesn't melt or burn in the sun, he shimmers. But seeing her bag on the screen was still pretty exciting. "AS SEEN IN TWILIGHT," she notes in all caps, including a couple of stills from the movie to prove it. And almost overnight, up to 10 orders a day began pouring in. Working late into the night, she says she can finish three bags per day. She advertises them as handmade by her, though she gets some help from her boyfriend, Nicolae White, Seattle's pre eminent African American Rush fan, who