‘Object of a lifetime': The first original Birkin bag from 1984 to be auctioned in July
NEW YORK – It is nearly impossible to walk inside an Hermes store and come home with a new Birkin bag. But if you wanted to get your hands on the original Birkin bag – the prototype made for British-French actress-singer Jane Birkin – it is going up for auction.
It will be sold as part of a Paris Fashion Icons sale, which Sotheby's is holding on July 10. Prior to that, it will be on view at Sotheby's Galleries in Paris from July 3 to 9.
There is no public estimate for how much the bag might fetch.
'At this stage, we will communicate it privately to potential bidders,' said Ms Morgane Halimi, global head of handbags and fashion for Sotheby's.
'Obviously, it is a one-of-a-kind piece, completely apart from any other handbag or any other Birkin. We are breaking records with Birkin bags on a regular basis at auction. We foresee it to be as unique as the Diana jumper or a worn jersey from the NBA. It has value because of what it is and what has happened because of that bag.'
The story behind the bag has become something of a fashion legend.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
This is the original bag made in 1984 for Jane Birkin, the late icon of French cinema. The story behind the bag has become something of a fashion legend.
She was on an Air France flight to London from Paris and had been upgraded to first class. The basket bag she carried, her signature for decades, was in poor shape. As she boarded the plane, the contents started to spill out: wallet, keys, business cards, diapers, glasses.
Her seatmate happened to be Mr Jean-Louis Dumas, then chief executive of Hermes, the French luxury house founded by Thierry Hermes in 1837.
Birkin and Mr Dumas talked about how she needed a bag that could fit all of her necessities, and they began to sketch out an idea on an airsickness bag. Their concept had two handles like a tote, and somewhat resembled a shrunken version of the Haut a Courroies luggage that Hermes made.
Her custom bag became the prototype of the Birkin, which was named after her.
The bag became desirable partly for its rarity.
'There are a limited number of them created each year,' Ms Halimi said. 'There is the craftsmanship: You can repair, restore and cherish it. And then, in a world of fast fashion and seasonal trends, it's not going to be out of style any time soon. If you are offered one to buy at Hermes, you feel like part of this small club.'
The Birkin has become a fixture in pop culture since its inception, namechecked in many song lyrics. It also appeared as a plot line in a 2001 episode of romantic comedy series Sex And The City (1998 to 2004) that included the memorable line: 'It's not a bag, it's a Birkin.'
This original bag is different in several ways from the commercially available Birkins. Its size is unique, with a height of just under 36cm and a depth of just under 41cm; its strap is not removable; the hardware is made of brass; the inner zipper is from a different manufacturer; and the studs on the bottom are a different shape.
And one more detail: a nail clipper that Birkin had hung on the outside of the bag is included.
She was known for not being precious with her Birkins. She covered some in stickers for political causes and frequently hung trinkets off them.
On social media, fans have taken to posting their own charm-laden bags or phones, which some call 'Birkinifying'.
Over the past year, imitations – or homages – of the bag have received attention online, including the most recent Boatkin, a new style that marries the design of the Birkin and the canvas material of American retail company L.L. Bean's Boat And Tote.
But the original Birkin has remained a subject of intense fascination. It was exhibited at New York's Museum of Modern Art as part of the show Items: Is Fashion Modern?, which ran from 2017 to 2018, and again in 2020 at London's Victoria And Albert Museum as part of the exhibition Bags Inside Out.
Sotheby's displayed it in the company's Paris galleries in October 2024, and at Sotheby's Maison, Hong Kong in April 2025 . Thousands of people came to see the bag at the Sotheby's showings, Ms Halimi said.
Jane Birkin, who died in July 2023 at the age of 76, owned five Birkin bags over the course of her life, one of which sold for around US$160,000 (S$205,000) in a 2021 auction.
Actress Jane Birkin's original Hermes Birkin on display at Sotheby's auction house in New York, US, on June 6.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
This prototype, which has the added value of being the original, was sold by Birkin at a charity auction for Aids in October 1994. It went to auction again in May 2000, at Poulain-Le Fur, and was purchased by Ms Catherine Benier, a prominent collector and the owner of the Les 3 Marches de Catherine B vintage shop in Paris, for an undisclosed price.
'Acquiring the first Birkin from Hermes was a dream of mine as a collector,' Ms Benier wrote in an e-mail.
She said she had read about the 1994 auction but did not participate, and was determined to win the 2000 auction when she heard about it in advance.
'I got the bag after fierce bidding between myself and other foreign bidders. It's the jewel in my collection.'
The Birkin has become a fixture in pop culture since its inception, namechecked in many song lyrics.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Ms Benier kept the bag stored, but the crowds who visited it in 2024 influenced her decision to sell.
'A collection is only worth it if it's shared,' she wrote.
She expects the bag to set records, but would not specify a desired number.
'Twenty-five years ago when I acquired it, it was already the most expensive bag in the world,' she wrote. 'All these elements fuel the legend of the first Birkin bag, so certainly a price exists, but what is it? This bag is the object of a lifetime, it's a legend, an icon. Does a legend have a price? Certainly.' NYTIMES
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Independent Singapore
2 hours ago
- Independent Singapore
‘People in Singapore, why you don't say hello to me, your neighbour?' — French woman asks after ‘no one replies' to her 'hellos' in SG
SINGAPORE: French TikToker Audrey Thiloy @audreythiloy just wanted to be friendly and expected a simple 'hello' from her Singaporean neighbours — but instead, she got radio silence and a cultural wake-up call. 'People in Singapore, why you don't say hello to neighbours?' she asked in her now-viral video, looking like a bewildered Disney princess who just moved into a horror movie scene. 'I just moved in and every time I say hello, hi, bonjour, bonsoir, no one replies,' she shared her frustration. @audreythiloy Tag your grumpy neighbour 😾 #tiktoksg #tiktoksg🇸🇬 #sgtiktok #neighbour #neighbors #angmoh #singapore ♬ original sound – Audrey Thiloy Seems like nobody even waved, nodded, or even gave her a half-hearted grunt. 'A little hello costs zero dollars [S$0]. It makes your day better, brightens your day, brightens your future,' she further advised. Unfortunately, Audrey, in Singapore, people, as some say in the comment section, might think you're selling something. Or worse — asking them if you can borrow their money or join an MLM. 'This is Singapore. Just accept it!' The video opened the floodgates for some seriously unfiltered commentary. 💀 'They think you're selling insurance.' 💀 'Hello = [equals] suspicious.' 💀 'We are scared we will be charged GST… Good-Morning Saying Tax.' 💀 'You're in our country… you're the guest… I've never heard of guests telling their hosts what to do.' 💀 'Say 'hello' once, and now we have to do it every day? That's a full-time job lah.' Some even hit the peak of local sarcasm: 'I say good morning to my neighbour. He asked me what's so good about the morning?' 'This is Singapore. Just accept it!' as another expressed, where even greetings are transactional, and if they're not, people assume you're either emotionally unstable, selling insurance, or both. 'I can't accept that, sir. I will continue to say Hello! 🙋🏼♀️' Despite the passive-aggressive feedback and unsolicited social etiquette lessons, Audrey clapped back like a polite queen: 'I can't accept that, sir. I will continue to say Hello! 🙋🏼♀️' Sis is fighting a one-woman war against social apathy — and a serious lack of basic human courtesy. 'If you want our hello, give us your money!' Many commenters weren't even mad — just brutally realistic: 'We have no time for small talk,' as one said. 'Overworked 12 hours a day, silent OT… who has energy to say hello?' said another. 'Stuck with 99-year HDB lease, MRT squeeze… then say hello? No, thanks,' added another. Others blamed introversion, social awkwardness, and generational trauma, such as from awkward CNY family gatherings, as one speculated: 'My neighbours don't even make eye contact. I assume they're introverts silently screaming inside the lift.' One Redditor went philosophical: 'Only money brightens our day. So if you want our hello, give us your money!' And if you think that's dark, one just said: 'We're not very happy people.' 'Come to Malaysia! We'll not only say hello to you, we'll also invite you for a nasi lemak breakfast!' Malaysians, on the other hand, were not going to let this moment and opportunity slide. 'Habibti [my dear], come to Malaysia! We'll not only say hello to you, we'll also invite you for a nasi lemak breakfast!' wrote one. 'Move to JB instead, people are merrier and happier here,' wrote another. 'You say hello to Indonesian people, and they always reply. We are humble,' noted someone from further down, south of Malaysia and Singapore. We're not saying there's a regional rivalry brewing here, but if friendliness were an Olympic sport, it seems Singapore would be disqualified for not showing up. 'People became afraid of getting too close to others… because they might start borrowing things…' Some older Singaporeans got nostalgic about the good ol' kampung days: 'Thirty years ago, in my parents' neighbourhood in Pasir Ris, everyone would greet each other.' Now, when people see someone entering the lift, they suddenly pretend to urgently need to check their email inbox. Another shared this theory: 'After village life, people became afraid of getting too close to others… because they might start borrowing things.' So the fear of lending their wok [cooking pan] to their neighbours might actually be what killed the greeting culture? 'You just met the wrong neighbour…' Finally, a few Singaporeans came to Audrey's and Singapore's defence: ❤️ 'I do [say hello to my neighbour]. You just met the wrong neighbour.' ❤️ 'Move to be my neighbour ❤️ I always say hello.' ❤️ 'Try a little nod and smile. That usually gets a reaction!' ❤️ 'It's nice that you're trying to be friendly. Don't worry if they don't respond.' One even offered this Singapore life hack: 🦉 'Forget bonjour. Try ni hao.' 'In France, the neighbours also never say hello…' To be fair, this isn't just a Singapore thing, as one pointed out: 'In France, the neighbours also never say hello.' So perhaps it's nothing personal. Maybe it's just urban living. Maybe it's just a bad neighbourhood. Maybe it's just capitalism. Maybe it's just TikTok, or maybe people are just tired of being told to 'brighten their future' when they can barely survive their present. However, in the middle of it all, Audrey remains undeterred like a sunbeam in an overcast CBD [ Central Business District ]. She'll keep on waving. She'll keep on smiling. She'll keep on saying hello — until someone eventually says it back. Lower your expectations and raise your tolerance for awkward social silences in Singapore If you're a cheerful foreigner moving into Singapore, lower your expectations and raise your tolerance for awkward social silences. However, if you're a Singaporean reading this — go on, surprise the next Audrey in your neighbourhood with just a little nod, a little smile, or heck, even a grumpy 'hello!' After all, it still costs zero dollars, and no GST, included. 😉 In other news, Audrey's cultural confusion didn't just stop at the 'hello' dilemma. In another TikTok video, she asked: 'I'm in the MRT in Singapore, and every time I am on the Blue Line, the MRT lady keeps telling, 'Happy, happy.' Please, people from Singapore, tell me what 'Happy Happy' means.' You, too, can hear it — or maybe not — in one of her first commuting experiences over here: French woman hears 'Happy Happy' in MRT announcement, asks Singaporeans what it means See also Motorcyclist falls off bike, slides across Jurong junction
Business Times
2 hours ago
- Business Times
Louis Vuitton launches long-awaited beauty products next week
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Straits Times
4 hours ago
- Straits Times
Actress Sarah Jessica Parker on the end of And Just Like That... and Carrie Bradshaw's legacy
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You once said she had made the hardest, worst and best decisions. What are the worst? The most obvious would probably be having an affair. That was not good judgment. She wasn't financially responsible, and she probably made some bad decisions about men in her life and what she expected from them. But I don't think that makes her a person not worth loving and caring about. And what was a great decision? Countless times she was the kind of friend she needed to be. The way she devoted herself to people she cared about. Also, her career. Sometimes, it's overlooked that she was a writer. When And Just Like That... was announced, Michael Patrick King insisted that it would include four new main characters, all women of colour. Was it successful in this? (From left) Actresses Cynthia Nixon, Kristin Davis, Sarah Jessica Parker, Sarita Choudhury and Nicole Ari Parker during a photo call for And Just Like That... in Paris in May. PHOTO: AFP Working with Sarita (Choudhury), Nicole (Ari Parker) and Karen (Pittman), it was thrilling, and it was rich with new energy and excitement. Those stories, in particular Sarita's and Nicole's, added a lot and stood on their own. Michael doesn't just throw people in and pretend that the audience is supposed to know them and care about them. He takes laser-like care in building those people and having them become important in front of everybody's eyes in real time. So, I think it was a huge success. When And Just Like That... debuted, it became a sensation. It was also frequently described as a hate watch. Do you understand why? I don't think I have the constitution to have spent a lot of time thinking about that. We always worked incredibly hard to tell stories that were interesting or real. I guess I don't care. And the reason I don't is because it has been so enormously successful, and the connections it has made with audiences have been meaningful. Did the show change tonally over the seasons? Oh, yeah. We couldn't just pretend that this catastrophic event hadn't happened in Carrie's life. That's why the second season was so buoyant and necessary. That was a conscious decision to have it feel much more of a souffle. Are heels still comfortable for you? Not as comfortable as they were 27 years ago, but I still have a high threshold for whatever they're making me feel. We had more flats than we've had in the past. And they worked, and they were great and right, but there is something about heels. The last scene of the final episode, in her house, she doesn't take them off. They're significant, the period at the end of the sentence. I didn't want to find a way to have something more sensible or comfortable. I don't see a world in which she is fully recognisable to herself by making comfort a priority. Sarah Jessica Parker in And Just Like That... 3. PHOTO: MAX Did you think that Carrie would end up with Aidan? No. And I love John Corbett, I adore him. But I did not think she would end up with him. And Michael didn't think that or want that either. Why end the show now? Because that's where the story ended. We could have gone on doing coffee shops. There are a million ways to do it that are easy, familiar and fun, but feel exploitative to us. We felt this was the honourable thing to do. It's easy to stay. It's where we're all happy. But you have to be principled when you make these difficult, agonising decisions because there's a lot of people who are affected. If we caught up with Carrie in another 15 years, what would her life be like? I think it would be pretty rich, in terms of friendships, culture and travel, and the ways in which the children of her friends are in her life. I feel good about her. I think she's set up pretty well. NYTIMES