Forget the Ironic L.L.Bean Tote—This Tibi Collab Is Genuinely Chic

The tote that New York City editors couldn't stop talking about is finally here to shop.

a model wearing a leather trench coat carrying Tibi's llbean boat and tote collaboration
(Image credit: Tibi)

When fashion people started carrying L.L.Bean's Boat and Totes en masse during the summer of 2022, they did it with a wink. The bags' canvas outers became a canvas for cheeky self-expression in work bag form: Ironic Boat and Totes, embroidered with "Birkin," "Full of It," or simply, "No ❤️," flooded TikTok and the front rows as a way to show one's personal style and sense of humor. I reported on the ironic tote trend for Harper's Bazaar and ordered my own, a mini tote with "scooped," an inside joke for journalists, in script on the outside.

Cut to two years and some change later. There's a new L.L.Bean Boat and Tote for fashion girls to send to their group chats, but this one has had an attitude adjustment. Instead of bitingly sarcastic or self-deprecating, it's quietly confident and charmingly practical. More importantly, it's the result of a collaboration with Tibi, a New York Fashion Week staple that's always understood how to dress women for real life while being themselves.

a model walks the tibi runway wearing a canvas tibi llbean bag accessorized with a black belt

Tibi previewed its L.L. Bean tote on the Spring 2024 runway.

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Tibi's rendition of the L.L.Bean Boat and Tote is much more than your standard-issue canvas bag, though it's just as sturdy and spacious as the classics. The single iteration available online at Tibi now features two long straps and a single, absolutely enormous compartment. There's a key ring on the inside and room to tote a 15" MacBook laptop.

Like I said: Very similar to the classics, in terms of its utility-focused features. But in terms of the overall look, this bag ascends to another level. Tibi founder and creative director Amy Smilovic first teased the $475 style on the Spring 2024 runway, where it wasn't carried like a tote bag at all. Instead, a clever handle sewn to the bottom allowed models to nestle it close to their sides like an extra-extra large clutch. And then there's the most distinctive detail of all: a black leather belt with a double loop.

a model wears a leather trench coat while swinging llbean's tote collaboration with tibi in front of a blank wall

Tibi's "reimagined" Boat and Tote features a black belted embellishment and an extra-spacious interior.

(Image credit: Tibi)

Carried with strapless black dresses and slouchy, nonchalant crewneck sweaters, Tibi's L.L.Bean tote looked nothing little like its witticism-embroidered cousins perched by editors' feet in the front row. It didn't need to shout to seem like a confident choice. I imagined the models wearing them had entire lives neatly packed inside and cool places to take them. And their senses of humor? Just as sharp as an ironic tote-carrier's, but maybe not so attention-seeking.

a model carries an llbean tote with tibi while wearing a tibi dress and sneakers in front of a blank wall

Models in the campaign and the runway carry the L.L.Bean bag like an extra-oversize clutch. This editor prefers it over her shoulder.

(Image credit: Tibi)

Many months of daydreaming about the bag after the runway show later, I got to carry the L.L.Bean and Tibi tote myself. I filled it with miniature quilted makeup bags, chargers, and my work laptop; I clipped my own emotional support charms to the buckle (a leather strawberry and a row of beads). It perches neatly on top of my roller bag when I travel, and it hangs at precisely the right length when I tote it to and from the office—where I've brought it every day for the past month.

In a short time, this bag has usurped all the others in my closet. It's more anonymous than a celebrity-favorite Madewell find (though I could easily imagine Hailey Bieber carrying one to Rhode HQ). While it's spacious, it's not so utilitarian that I'd be embarrassed to lug it to an after-work event, laptop and all. The L.L.Bean tote by way of Tibi is my holy grail bag for 2024. No joke.

Halie LeSavage
Senior Fashion & Beauty News Editor

Halie LeSavage is the senior fashion and beauty news editor at Marie Claire, where she assigns, edits, and writes stories for both sections. Halie is an expert on runway trends, celebrity style, emerging fashion and beauty brands, and shopping (naturally). In over seven years as a professional journalist, Halie’s reporting has ranged from fashion week coverage spanning the Copenhagen, New York, Milan, and Paris markets, to profiles on industry insiders like celebrity stylist Molly Dickson, to breaking news stories on noteworthy brand collaborations and beauty product launches. (She can personally confirm that Bella Hadid’s Ôrebella perfume is worth the hype.) She has also written dozens of research-backed shopping guides to finding the best tote bags, ballet flats, and more. Most of all, Halie loves to explore what style trends—like the rise of emotional support accessories or TikTok’s 75 Hard Style Challenge—can say about culture writ large. She also justifies almost any purchase by saying it’s “for work.”

Halie has previously held writer and editor roles at Glamour, Morning Brew, and Harper’s Bazaar. She has been cited as a fashion and beauty expert in The Cut, CNN Underscored, and Reuters, among other outlets, and appears in newsletters like Selleb and Self Checkout to provide shopping recommendations. In 2022, she earned the Hearst Spotlight Award for excellence and innovation in fashion journalism. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in English from Harvard College. Outside of work, Halie is passionate about books, baking, and her miniature Bernedoodle, Dolly. For a behind-the-scenes look at her reporting, you can follow Halie on Instagram and TikTok.