Yesterday, Jane Birkin passed away, a style icon of the ’60s and ’70s and a pioneer of the sexual revolution. Her role in Blow-Up, directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, became legendary, and Je t’aime… moi non plus – the single from the album she made with Serge Gainsbourg – was even banned from Italian radio for its obscenity. But today, let’s talk about the Birkin bag, the handbag by Hermès inspired by the actress.
It all began in 1984 when Jane Birkin found herself in first class and met Jean-Louis Dumas, the CEO of Hermès at the time, on a flight from Paris to London. She was traveling with a disorganized suitcase that fell to the floor, leading Birkin to start a discussion with Dumas about the potential features of the perfect bag. During this meeting – destined to go down in fashion history – the actress proposed to the businessman the idea of creating a bag larger than the classic Kelly but smaller than her carry-on luggage. Birkin ended up sketching the design of this bag on a stomach distress bag. A month later, she received a call from Hermès, inviting her to discuss the model they were designing in her honor. And thus, the Birkin bag was born, becoming one of the best-selling pieces in the history of the French fashion house.


Today, the Birkin bag is extremely difficult to obtain and was born from the mind of one of the most enduring style icons. It is a spacious and versatile rectangular-shaped bag. However, not everyone knows that before this bag, Jane Birkin was famous for her wicker baskets. It’s a trend that continues to return even today and makes the actress a woman like any other, capable of being independent starting from the bag she carries.

