RIMOWA Essential Check-In L Purple Review | Regal Polycarbonate Luggage
Purple Goes Big
The colour purple has long carried associations of royalty, creativity, and individuality — and when applied to the largest standard suitcase in the RIMOWA Essential range, the effect is nothing short of spectacular. The Essential Check-In L in Purple polycarbonate takes all the practical virtues of the large-checked-bag format — 81 litres of capacity, a weight-saving polycarbonate shell, RIMOWA's peerless Multiwheel® running gear — and wraps them in a colour that refuses to apologise for itself. At HK$9,400, this is an investment in luggage that serves as both a utility and a personal manifesto.
Where blue says "professional," grey says "discreet," and black says "classic," purple says something altogether more interesting: "I have made a considered choice, and I am not afraid of being seen." The Essential Check-In L Purple commands attention on every luggage carousel it graces, yet the depth and richness of the colour-through polycarbonate prevent it from ever feeling garish. This is not a loud case; it is a resonant one, its purple shell catching terminal lights like a well-cut gemstone while the grooved architecture breaks the surface into a rhythm of highlight and shadow that gives the colour room to breathe.
Why Polycarbonate Liberates Colour
On an aluminium case, producing a colour like this deep purple would require anodising — a process that is expensive, fragile, and prone to wearing through on impact corners. Every scratch on a coloured aluminium case reveals silver metal beneath, creating a two-tone distress pattern that some find charming (the "patina" argument) and others find maddening. Polycarbonate solves this problem at the material level: the purple pigment is mixed into the raw plastic before the shell is moulded, which means every scratch, every scuff, every conveyor-belt kiss reveals more of the same colour. The case ages monochromatically — it gets the stories of travel without the visual noise of contrasting underlayers.
This colour-through approach is particularly important on a checked bag the size of the Check-In L, which will inevitably endure more handling abuse than a carry-on. Baggage handlers do not care about your anodising. Conveyor belts do not respect paint. Polycarbonate, with its flex-on-impact behaviour and homogenous colour, meets these realities with a shrug rather than a scar.
