SHIPPING
We are proud to offer international shipping services that currently operate in over 200 countries and islands world wide. Nothing means more to us than bringing our customers great value and service. We will continue to grow to meet the needs of all our customers, delivering a service beyond all expectation anywhere in the world.
Do you ship worldwide?
Yes. We provide free shipping to over 200 countries around the world. However, there are some locations we are unable to ship to. If you happen to be located in one of those countries we will contact you.
What about customs?
We are not responsible for any custom fees once the items have been shipped. By purchasing our products, you consent that one or more packages may be shipped to you and may get custom fees when they arrive to your country.
How long does shipping take?
Shipping time varies by location. These are our estimates:
| Location |
*Estimated Shipping Time |
| United States |
5-20 Business days |
| Canada, Europe |
5-20 Business days |
| Australia, New Zealand |
5-20 Business days |
| Central & South America |
5-25 Business days |
| Asia |
5-20 Business days |
| Africa |
5-25 Business days |
*This doesn’t include our 1-3 day processing time.
Do you provide tracking information?
Yes, you will receive an email once your order ships that contains your tracking information. If you haven’t received tracking info within 5 days, please contact us.
My tracking says “no information available at the moment”.
For some shipping companies, it takes 2-5 business days for the tracking information to update on the system. If your order was placed more than 5 business days ago and there is still no information on your tracking number, please contact us.
Will my items be sent in one package?
For logistical reasons, items in the same purchase will sometimes be sent in separate packages, even if you've specified combined shipping.
If you have any other questions, please contact us and we will do our best to help you out.
RETURNS
Order cancellation
All orders can be cancelled until they are shipped. If your order has been paid and you need to make a change or cancel an order, you must contact us within 12 hours. Once the packaging and shipping process has started, it can no longer be cancelled.
Refunds
Your satisfaction is our #1 priority. Therefore, you can request a refund or reshipment for ordered products if:
- If you did not receive the product within the guaranteed time (45 days not including 1-3 day processing) you can request a refund or a reshipment.
- If you received the wrong item you can request a refund or a reshipment.
- If you do not want the product you’ve received you may request a refund but you must return the item at your expense and the item must be unused.
We do not issue the refund if:
- Your order did not arrive due to factors within your control (i.e. providing the wrong shipping address)
- Your order did not arrive due to exceptional circumstances outside the control of megaselectionsnook.shop (i.e. not cleared by customs, delayed by a natural disaster).
- Other exceptional circumstances outside the control of megaselectionsnook.shop.
*You can submit refund requests within 15 days after the guaranteed period for delivery (45 days) has expired. You can do it by sending a message on Contact Us page
If you are approved for a refund, then your refund will be processed, and a credit will automatically be applied to your credit card or original method of payment, within 14 days.
Exchanges
If for any reason you would like to exchange your product, perhaps for a different size in clothing, you must contact us first and we will guide you through the steps.
Please do not send your purchase back to us unless we authorise you to do so.
The controlled scarcity breakdown finally explained why walking into an Hermès store feels so different from every other luxury experience.
I've bought luxury for fifteen years and never once thought about why Hermès holds value the way it does. This guide connected the dots — craftsmanship, scarcity, quiet branding, disciplined growth — all working as one system. I used to evaluate bags by how they looked on Instagram. Now I evaluate the whole ecosystem behind them. My last two purchases were completely different because of this shift.
Short, sharp, and way more insightful than most luxury blogs.
The quiet luxury philosophy section put words to something I've always felt but couldn't explain to friends who ask why I prefer Hermès over louder brands.
The part about emotional signaling — how owning Hermès communicates patience and long-term thinking rather than impulse — that reframed the entire purchase psychology for me. I shared this with my husband who always questioned the price point and for the first time he understood the difference between expensive and valuable.
Object of care versus unit of inventory. That one line changed everything.
Solid analysis but I wanted more on how the brand compares to specific competitors rather than luxury houses in general. The craftsmanship and scarcity sections are excellent — just wished the comparison framework went deeper.
The smarter evaluation habits section trained me to look at handle proportions and hardware weight — details I never noticed before 🔍
Concise and intelligent. No wasted space.
I teach a fashion business seminar and this PDF covers Hermès positioning more clearly than several textbooks I've assigned. The case study on long-term brand power is especially well-constructed — showing how stable customer perception is across years and regions. I'm adding this to my recommended reading list.
❤️🔥⭐
The common comparison mistakes section called me out — I was absolutely judging Hermès by the same metrics I use for trendier brands.
Decent overview but much of this will feel familiar if you've already researched Hermès seriously. The section on what buyers often overlook had some fresh angles though, especially the bit about stitching precision and leather structure as subtle prestige signals.
Stability signals authority — four words that explain Hermès better than any documentary I've watched.
The distinction between temporary luxury hype and durable brand power is the most useful framework in here. I was considering a bag from a brand riding a celebrity wave and this guide made me step back and ask whether the value would hold in five years. It wouldn't have. Redirected that budget toward a piece with structural staying power.
Learned more in twenty minutes than from hours of YouTube comparisons.
Good foundation but the AI chapter felt surface-level compared to the brand analysis. Would've preferred that space used for deeper competitive positioning. The first three chapters carry the real weight.
The layered recognition effect concept — insiders recognizing craftsmanship while everyone else just sees quality — that's the most elegant explanation of quiet luxury I've come across.
Sent this to three people before I even finished it.
👏🖤✨👌
I run a small leather goods brand and the insight about prioritizing craftsmanship over speed as a positioning strategy gave me permission to stop chasing volume. We slowed production by 40%, improved our finishing, and our return rate dropped to nearly zero. This guide isn't just about understanding Hermès — it's a blueprint for anyone building something meant to last.
The resale value angle in the case study makes the investment argument concrete rather than theoretical.
Now I check hardware weight on everything. Can't unlearn that 🖤
Good read but some of the points about heritage and consistency overlapped between the first two chapters. Tightening that up would make the overall argument even tighter. Still worth the time for anyone serious about understanding the luxury market.
The point about Hermès not relying on urgency marketing is the clearest sign of how differently they operate.
Reading about how slow design evolution gets misread as stagnation when it's actually intentional restraint — I used to make that exact mistake. This guide corrected a blind spot I didn't know I had.
Compact, thoughtful, zero fluff. Exactly what luxury analysis should be.
Every luxury consumer should read this before their next purchase. Period.