My LVMH Dig Using Chrome
Alright, so the other day I got curious about LVMH. You hear the name thrown around, luxury stuff, big company, all that. I figured I’d spend a little time actually looking into what they own, just using my trusty Chrome browser.
First thing, obviously, I opened up a fresh Chrome window. Kept it simple, just typed “LVMH” into the search bar and hit enter. Google did its thing, and the official LVMH group website popped right up at the top.
Clicked on that. The site loaded up pretty quick. Looked clean, professional, you know, what you’d expect. My main goal was just to see the full list of brands they manage. Sometimes they call them ‘Houses’ or ‘Maisons’, fancy names.
So I started poking around the navigation menu. Found something like ‘Brands’ or ‘Maisons’. Clicked that. And wow, the list just started rolling out. It was split into categories, like Wines & Spirits, Fashion & Leather Goods, Perfumes & Cosmetics, Watches & Jewelry, and even retail stuff like Sephora.
Navigating the Brand Maze
I started opening a few of the big names in new tabs within Chrome. Louis Vuitton, Dior, Hennessy, TAG Heuer. Chrome handled opening all those tabs just fine, didn’t really slow down much initially.

- Checked out the Louis Vuitton site. Lots of images, pretty heavy visually.
- Hopped over to the Dior tab. Similar vibe, very sleek.
- Looked at Hennessy. Different feel, more traditional.
- Then Sephora, which is totally different, more like a busy online store.
It was kinda interesting seeing how different each brand felt online, even though they’re all under the same big LVMH roof. Chrome kept everything organized in the tabs up top, so switching between them was easy.
After maybe half an hour of clicking through different brand sites, I noticed my laptop fan started whirring a bit louder. Guess loading all those high-res images and fancy web designs in multiple tabs started adding up. Chrome itself was still running smooth, but you could tell it was putting the computer to work.
Didn’t really run into any major problems. All the sites loaded correctly in Chrome, videos played, images showed up. It was just a straightforward browsing session, really. Spent about an hour just getting a better feel for how huge LVMH actually is and what they’re involved in. It’s quite the empire. And yeah, Chrome handled the exploration part without any fuss.