Grace Kelly

ya, it's shown now and ......:woot: it's a color portrait, very beautiful...
gracemtv0000258028fok8.jpg

mptv
 
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oh i've just notice, she wore a high heel while pregnant in last months :shock:
Is it popular to wear high heel when pregnant? here we almost never seen..
 
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SFGATE

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Fashion's Hitchcock Obsession

D&G.jpg
Style.com
The Hitchcock heroine, as interpreted by Dolce & Gabbana

With black suits, pencil skirts, nipped-in waists, fur, peep-toe shoes and cocktail dresses flooding the racks for fall, perhaps it was inevitable that Hitchcock fashion spreads would follow. Think Grace Kelly, Kim Novak, Tippi Hendren, Janet Leigh ...

Style.com has declared "heroine chic" skirt suits one of the Top 10 Trends, Papercity has "Fashion's Icy Hitchcock Heroine" on its cover (though we doubt Grace Kelly would really have worn a cropped shearling jacket), and Elle mentioned Hitchcock-inspired local designs by Sunhee Moon and others. Alexander McQueen even combined "Vertigo" with "The Man Who Knew Too Much" into the poster for his fall collection show.
Dedicated followers of the glossies may recall a rash of Hitchcock layouts last year, too. The London Times gave instructions on how to best replicate the look last June, and others followed suit. The plethora of Hitchcock locations in Northern California makes it all the more irrestistible. But as trends appear, disappear, then cycle back, stronger that ever, it's enough to evoke the sort of weird deja vu James Stewart experiences in "Vertigo" when he meets Kim Novak again, as Judy rather than Madeleine. Different outfit, different hair color, different demeanor, but the same dame underneath. It's not so different in fashion.

Posted By: Laura Compton (Email) | August 30 2005 at 11:28 AM
 
Signs on San Diego

By Mort Rosenblum
ASSOCIATED PRESS

9:15 a.m. July 10, 2004
MONACO – Prince Rainier III, who reshaped this Riviera backwater into a sparkling hide-out for the rich, is 81 and ailing. And some wonder whether after his reign ends, medieval-modern Monaco's fate will be to melt away into neighboring France.
t.gif


Advertisement


Such talk, heresy to most Monegasques, is uttered only in hushed tones, and no crisis is necessarily imminent. The line of succession, on which Monaco's independence hangs, is assured through Albert, Rainier's popular 46-year-old bachelor son. And if his shy, retiring nature drives him to abdicate, sisters Caroline or Stephanie can step in.
But the world is changing fast around Monaco. Its French neighbors now belong to a 25-nation European Union bent on eradicating old anomalies and harmonizing its tax laws to undercut fiscal havens like Monaco. To survive, the tiny principality will likely need a tough-minded ruler.
For many close to the inner circle, such as Nadia Lacoste, Albert is plainly up to the job. Lacoste was palace spokeswoman in the heady days of Princess Grace, the actress Grace Kelly, who married Rainier in 1956 and was killed in a car crash on a hairpin bend in 1982.
"Albert will be a wonderful prince," she told The Associated Press. "On his own, he'll show a dynamic personality and effective leadership."
Albert himself outlined his dilemma in a rare interview with the Paris daily Le Monde: "If I say something against my father, people think I'm impatient to replace him. If I say nothing, I'm seen as an imbecile."
Still, other insiders expect Albert to withdraw from public life. None agree to be quoted by name, fearing regal wrath. Despite its velvet trimmings and elected legislature, they say, Monaco is run by fiat as it has been for nine centuries.
Rainier was hospitalized twice this year. For three weeks, he was treated for "general fatigue." In March, he spent 12 more days in the hospital for what the palace said were heart problems.
In Paris, authorities refuse comment on such a touchy issue as the status of Monaco. If assured of anonymity, however, some wonder aloud how much longer the principality can survive intact.
European Union officials are equally tightlipped about the fate of Monaco and other quirks of European history and geography such as San Marino in Italy, the Channel islands between England and France, and Andorra in the Pyrenees. But in private conversations, Monaco's future is a question.
Although no bigger than Central Park in New York, Monaco has all the trappings of an independent state – a seat at the United Nations, a passport and postage stamps, and a Legislative Council that drafts bills for the prince to sign.
But the French shadow is everywhere. Monaco's language is French, the currency was French francs and is now the euro, and visitors can breeze down the Riviera highway and into the principality without even realizing it.
The prince chooses his prime minister from among three French officials selected in Paris.
In 1962, President Charles de Gaulle resolved an economic dispute with a bald show of force. Rainier backed down in a face-saving compromise, but no one missed the broader message – Monaco exists at France's pleasure.
In 2000, three French auditors declared that Monaco was too lenient on money launderers. Now, quietly but increasingly, people speculate that a future French government will be tempted to exert sovereignty in the absence of a strong leader.
Whatever happens, Rainier's shoes will be hard to fill.
The prince has spent half a century remaking Monaco. His marriage to Grace Kelly at the peak of her Hollywood fame ("High Noon," "Rear Window," "Dial M for Murder") brought Monaco into the realm of fairy tale. After her death, Rainier channeled his grief into yet more public works.
Monaco's population of 32,000 includes only 7,080 citizens, but it has grown by 20 percent on land reclaimed from the Mediterranean.
A $328 million floating breakwater expanded the harbor capacity by a third to accommodate luxury cruise ships.
After high-rise apartments climbed up the mountainside, builders dug deep for underground office space and yet more parking for Ferraris and Lamborghinis.
Old Monaco perches on a looming rock, with the prince's storybook palace, the cathedral where Grace's remains are entombed, and a few narrow cobbled streets of government ministries and tourist shops.
Below is Monte Carlo and a small port choked with the giant white yachts of European industry kings and Middle Eastern potentates.
An exotic botanical garden, vibrant bougainvillea and lush flower beds splash the concrete with color. The fanciest designer names label downtown shops. Banks are ubiquitous; litter is not.
But with all of its transformation, the principality has yet to shake the epithet from pre-World War II days: A sunny place for shady people.
Monaco offers access to the enlarged European Union with few of its legal constraints. It levies no income tax and depends heavily on sales taxes, though the French and Americans are subject to their home country's taxes. Monte Carlo's fabled gaming tables are still awash in money.
The principality says little about its finances, but official U.S. estimates put the gross domestic product near $900 million, making the per capita income of more than $27,000 among the world's highest.
Private international watchdog groups have faulted its bank secrecy and EU authorities have pressed it to be more transparent. In December, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development named only five countries as uncooperative tax havens: Andorra, Liberia, Liechtenstein, the Marshall Islands and Monaco.
Ariane Picco-Margossian, head of Monaco's special unit to quash financial fraud, recently briefed a news conference on money laundering.
She said 110 cases were investigated in 2003, and 19 were prosecuted. After rigorous questioning, she estimated the total under suspicion at about $120 million over four years.
But reporters pressing for details – such as whether Russian criminal money was involved – were answered with a smile, a shrug or silence.
"I love Monaco because it's not really part of the world," photographer Helmut Newton told The Associated Press just before his death in December. "It's a happy corner at the edge of everything."
Although he often traveled to his native Berlin, Newton made his headquarters here, along with Swedish tennis legend Bjorn Borg and a range of international notables.
If the ornate old casino and Cafe de Paris slot machines bring in only 4 percent of Monaco's wealth, they set the tone. All night, high-rollers in black tie mingle with sloppily dressed tour-bus crowds.
Elaborate remodeling has revived the grandeur of the Hotel Metropole, a Belle Epoque landmark that Rainier refused to let Aristotle Onassis demolish when the Greek shipping magnate was a major investor in Monaco.
Still, the principality's character has changed dramatically over the years.
"Visitors came for an entire season," said Jacques Ferreyrolles, 83, whose family has run the Balmoral Hotel since 1896. "They had style, a sense of class. Now they just come and go in a few days."
Although a fortunate few pay $100 for wild asparagus risotto at Alain Ducasse's three-star Louis XV restaurant at the Hotel de Paris, many more go for beer and burgers at the dockside Stars 'N' Bars.
Ferreyrolles misses the Princess Grace era of glamour and excitement. "It is tragic," he said. "The Americans now, they don't even change for dinner."
Monaco's government clearly feels the need to adapt to this new European order, shifting away from its image as a private family business run as a millionaires' playground. Also, it needs a broader tax base.
"Without any doubt, we must diversify, bring in new industries and businesses that go beyond casinos and tourism," Frank Biancheri, the economy minister, said in an interview.
The old attraction is waning. Perpetually jammed traffic dampens the Mediterranean mood. Prices are high. A two-room fixer-upper can cost more than a million dollars.
The royal mystique is wearing thin for many Monegasques.
Caroline's third husband, Prince Ernst August of Hanover, has been in trouble for punching out a German photographer and a hotel owner. Caroline runs her mother's charities, while waging a long court battle to keep journalists from prying into her life.
Stephanie, with two children born out of wedlock, periodically scandalizes Monaco. She divorced her husband of 18 months when he was pictured with a Belgian stripper. She then married a circus acrobat.
On the back streets, some Monegasques are downright rude about the ruling family, which they blame for high prices and a wasteful lifestyle. But others see a different picture.
Lucie Rinaldi, a ship chandler in the old port for 40 years, shrugged when asked what she thought about the future.
"We don't know much about what happens up on the rock," she said, "but we know what the prince has done for Monaco. We will miss him and, whatever happens next, the place won't be the same."
 
San Diego Tribune

By Mort Rosenblum
ASSOCIATED PRESS

9:15 a.m. July 10, 2004
MONACO – Prince Rainier III, who reshaped this Riviera backwater into a sparkling hide-out for the rich, is 81 and ailing. And some wonder whether after his reign ends, medieval-modern Monaco's fate will be to melt away into neighboring France.
t.gif


Advertisement


Such talk, heresy to most Monegasques, is uttered only in hushed tones, and no crisis is necessarily imminent. The line of succession, on which Monaco's independence hangs, is assured through Albert, Rainier's popular 46-year-old bachelor son. And if his shy, retiring nature drives him to abdicate, sisters Caroline or Stephanie can step in.
But the world is changing fast around Monaco. Its French neighbors now belong to a 25-nation European Union bent on eradicating old anomalies and harmonizing its tax laws to undercut fiscal havens like Monaco. To survive, the tiny principality will likely need a tough-minded ruler.
For many close to the inner circle, such as Nadia Lacoste, Albert is plainly up to the job. Lacoste was palace spokeswoman in the heady days of Princess Grace, the actress Grace Kelly, who married Rainier in 1956 and was killed in a car crash on a hairpin bend in 1982.
"Albert will be a wonderful prince," she told The Associated Press. "On his own, he'll show a dynamic personality and effective leadership."
Albert himself outlined his dilemma in a rare interview with the Paris daily Le Monde: "If I say something against my father, people think I'm impatient to replace him. If I say nothing, I'm seen as an imbecile."
Still, other insiders expect Albert to withdraw from public life. None agree to be quoted by name, fearing regal wrath. Despite its velvet trimmings and elected legislature, they say, Monaco is run by fiat as it has been for nine centuries.
Rainier was hospitalized twice this year. For three weeks, he was treated for "general fatigue." In March, he spent 12 more days in the hospital for what the palace said were heart problems.
In Paris, authorities refuse comment on such a touchy issue as the status of Monaco. If assured of anonymity, however, some wonder aloud how much longer the principality can survive intact.
European Union officials are equally tightlipped about the fate of Monaco and other quirks of European history and geography such as San Marino in Italy, the Channel islands between England and France, and Andorra in the Pyrenees. But in private conversations, Monaco's future is a question.
Although no bigger than Central Park in New York, Monaco has all the trappings of an independent state – a seat at the United Nations, a passport and postage stamps, and a Legislative Council that drafts bills for the prince to sign.
But the French shadow is everywhere. Monaco's language is French, the currency was French francs and is now the euro, and visitors can breeze down the Riviera highway and into the principality without even realizing it.
The prince chooses his prime minister from among three French officials selected in Paris.
In 1962, President Charles de Gaulle resolved an economic dispute with a bald show of force. Rainier backed down in a face-saving compromise, but no one missed the broader message – Monaco exists at France's pleasure.
In 2000, three French auditors declared that Monaco was too lenient on money launderers. Now, quietly but increasingly, people speculate that a future French government will be tempted to exert sovereignty in the absence of a strong leader.
Whatever happens, Rainier's shoes will be hard to fill.
The prince has spent half a century remaking Monaco. His marriage to Grace Kelly at the peak of her Hollywood fame ("High Noon," "Rear Window," "Dial M for Murder") brought Monaco into the realm of fairy tale. After her death, Rainier channeled his grief into yet more public works.
Monaco's population of 32,000 includes only 7,080 citizens, but it has grown by 20 percent on land reclaimed from the Mediterranean.
A $328 million floating breakwater expanded the harbor capacity by a third to accommodate luxury cruise ships.
After high-rise apartments climbed up the mountainside, builders dug deep for underground office space and yet more parking for Ferraris and Lamborghinis.
Old Monaco perches on a looming rock, with the prince's storybook palace, the cathedral where Grace's remains are entombed, and a few narrow cobbled streets of government ministries and tourist shops.
Below is Monte Carlo and a small port choked with the giant white yachts of European industry kings and Middle Eastern potentates.
An exotic botanical garden, vibrant bougainvillea and lush flower beds splash the concrete with color. The fanciest designer names label downtown shops. Banks are ubiquitous; litter is not.
But with all of its transformation, the principality has yet to shake the epithet from pre-World War II days: A sunny place for shady people.
Monaco offers access to the enlarged European Union with few of its legal constraints. It levies no income tax and depends heavily on sales taxes, though the French and Americans are subject to their home country's taxes. Monte Carlo's fabled gaming tables are still awash in money.
The principality says little about its finances, but official U.S. estimates put the gross domestic product near $900 million, making the per capita income of more than $27,000 among the world's highest.
Private international watchdog groups have faulted its bank secrecy and EU authorities have pressed it to be more transparent. In December, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development named only five countries as uncooperative tax havens: Andorra, Liberia, Liechtenstein, the Marshall Islands and Monaco.
Ariane Picco-Margossian, head of Monaco's special unit to quash financial fraud, recently briefed a news conference on money laundering.
She said 110 cases were investigated in 2003, and 19 were prosecuted. After rigorous questioning, she estimated the total under suspicion at about $120 million over four years.
But reporters pressing for details – such as whether Russian criminal money was involved – were answered with a smile, a shrug or silence.
"I love Monaco because it's not really part of the world," photographer Helmut Newton told The Associated Press just before his death in December. "It's a happy corner at the edge of everything."
Although he often traveled to his native Berlin, Newton made his headquarters here, along with Swedish tennis legend Bjorn Borg and a range of international notables.
If the ornate old casino and Cafe de Paris slot machines bring in only 4 percent of Monaco's wealth, they set the tone. All night, high-rollers in black tie mingle with sloppily dressed tour-bus crowds.
Elaborate remodeling has revived the grandeur of the Hotel Metropole, a Belle Epoque landmark that Rainier refused to let Aristotle Onassis demolish when the Greek shipping magnate was a major investor in Monaco.
Still, the principality's character has changed dramatically over the years.
"Visitors came for an entire season," said Jacques Ferreyrolles, 83, whose family has run the Balmoral Hotel since 1896. "They had style, a sense of class. Now they just come and go in a few days."
Although a fortunate few pay $100 for wild asparagus risotto at Alain Ducasse's three-star Louis XV restaurant at the Hotel de Paris, many more go for beer and burgers at the dockside Stars 'N' Bars.
Ferreyrolles misses the Princess Grace era of glamour and excitement. "It is tragic," he said. "The Americans now, they don't even change for dinner."
Monaco's government clearly feels the need to adapt to this new European order, shifting away from its image as a private family business run as a millionaires' playground. Also, it needs a broader tax base.
"Without any doubt, we must diversify, bring in new industries and businesses that go beyond casinos and tourism," Frank Biancheri, the economy minister, said in an interview.
The old attraction is waning. Perpetually jammed traffic dampens the Mediterranean mood. Prices are high. A two-room fixer-upper can cost more than a million dollars.
The royal mystique is wearing thin for many Monegasques.
Caroline's third husband, Prince Ernst August of Hanover, has been in trouble for punching out a German photographer and a hotel owner. Caroline runs her mother's charities, while waging a long court battle to keep journalists from prying into her life.
Stephanie, with two children born out of wedlock, periodically scandalizes Monaco. She divorced her husband of 18 months when he was pictured with a Belgian stripper. She then married a circus acrobat.
On the back streets, some Monegasques are downright rude about the ruling family, which they blame for high prices and a wasteful lifestyle. But others see a different picture.
Lucie Rinaldi, a ship chandler in the old port for 40 years, shrugged when asked what she thought about the future.
"We don't know much about what happens up on the rock," she said, "but we know what the prince has done for Monaco. We will miss him and, whatever happens next, the place won't be the same."
 
NY Daily News
BY JULIAN KESNER
Sunday, March 26th 2006, 1:63AM
WHEN WEDDINGS HAD TRUE GRACE
Today's celebrity weddings don't hold a candle to the elegance and dazzle of Grace Kelly's nuptials with Prince Rainier of Monaco 50 years ago. The Philadelphia Museum of Art is helping fans of the
legendary actress (a Philly native) relive that magical moment by displaying her bridal dress, shoes, headpiece, veil and prayer book from April 1 until May 21. It's part of the institution's three spring fashion shows reflecting the changing tastes in fashion, although anyone who has seen "Rear Window" or "Dial M for Murder" will have only one thing on his mind when visiting. And if it inspires a little shopping for dresses of your own, keep in mind that shopping is now tax-free in Pennsylvania. For more on the Grace Kelly exhibit, call (215) 763-8100 or visit www.philamuseum.org.
 
Easier

85754-AvaandGrace.jpg

City high-flyer Helen Barklam has given up her career in London to fulfil what must be every girl’s dream… designing and selling handbags. Her new handbag company - launched last weekend - carries classic leather handbags and vintage designs inspired by mid-20th Century glamour and beautiful women like Ava Gardner and Grace Kelly.

Appropriately the business – which is online and via mail order - is called ava and grace.

Budding entrepreneur Helen has taken her inspiration from one of our most glamorous eras and designed a classic and stylish handbag collection for decadent 21st century women.

Helen says: “I couldn’t find a simple, gorgeous, classic bag on the high street – so I decided to do something about it! All women want a little style and glamour in their lives and who better to be inspired by than style icons like Ava Gardner, Grace Kelly, Audrey Hepburn and Marilyn Monroe?

“ava and grace bags are simply designed to be classic and stylish. But, that can be hard to find these days. On behalf of all handbag-loving women out there, I wanted to take us back to a good old fashioned and understated look – classic, elegant and stylish.”

“I have a huge passion for design – and of course bags! I’d say to any budding female entrepreneurs – go for it!”

There are five products in Helen’s first collection, made of leather and genuine, hard-to-find vintage fabric from the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s, which has been sourced from across the world.
 
Washington Post
Hermes v. Hermes

By Annie Groer
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; 1:49 PM
Paper or plastic? Somehow we manage that decision quickly, almost reflexively. But Kelly or Birkin? That is a far more serious matter, and not just because it involves three or four zeroes. Choosing between these two iconic bags is far more complicated.

While both styles exude money (old, new, discreet, flashy), each signals to the world, or at least to an international pack of fashion hounds, a very different aesthetic and vibe.


"The Kelly is a touch more formal, a little more appropriate for an evening out, a business dinner, as a more refined look. The Birkin is more sporty, more casual. Often people use it as a briefcase, throw in a change of shoes," says Trina Sams-Manning, manager of the Hermes shop in Fairfax Square, which recently reopened after a major facelift.

Inga Guen, who sells gently used Kellys and Birkins at Inga's Once Is Not Enough, a high-end consignment shop in Northwest Washington, is even more emphatic about the difference. "A woman who is going to wear the Kelly is of very erect stature, she comes from money, very good background, is extraordinarily educated, and life to her is one where she will be very inconspicuous," says Guen, an avid Kelly carrier. She cuts a bit of slack for the Birkin femme, who "wears Manolo mules, a pair of jeans, a little Chanel jacket. She is the younger woman."

Both bags have made their marks on the cultural landscape. In "Le Divorce," a red crocodile Kelly was a sure sign that young Isabel was having having an affair with someone rich enough to buy her this five-figure confection.
The Birkin became an intense object of desire on "Sex and the City," when Kim Cattrall's Samantha told Hermes she needed one instantly for a client. Yes, it was a big fat lie, but morally defensible in social circles where owning a bag that can cost as much as a car is, like, truly, seriously important.

Conversely, a Birkin may have worked against Martha Stewart, who schlepped her well-worn Hermes to court during her 2004 insider trading trial, to the derision of critics who thought the super-expensive bag might not play well with a middle-class jury.

For the uninitiated, these bags, which start at about $7,000 and can top $25,000 depending on hide and hue, are named for a duo of beautiful actresses.

Philadelphia-born Grace Kelly -- so blonde, so patrician -- had been wed less than a year to Prince Rainier of Monaco when she deftly obscured her royal pregnancy with a structured, crocodile Hermes purse on a 1956 Life magazine cover. Created in 1892 as a large saddle carrier -- the French fashion house started out as a saddlemaker -- the bag was downsized for daywear in the 1930s. But after its moment in Life, it was dedicated to Her Serene Highness, and, as legends often do, lives on after her.

By contrast, it was during a 1981 airplane flight that the effluvia in British-born actress-singer Jane Birkin's overstuffed purse spilled in the vicinity of Jean-Louis Dumas-Hermes. Three years later, the venerable firm introduced a bag for Birkin's more bohemian lifestyle based on an 1892 design. In a splendid bit of irony, Birkin recently confessed she barely used hers because it had proved hazardous to her health.

"I told Hermes they were mad to make it. My one was always full, and it ended up giving me tendinitis," she told the Scotland on Sunday newspaper in March.

Like the Kelly, the Birkin is crafted entirely by hand by a single artisan from start to finish, and embellished with a petite padlock, keys and gleaming hardware made of white or yellow gold.

Why, exactly, are they so expensive, so obsessively coveted?


Hermes v. Hermes

For starters, they are beautifully made. ... The bottom is built of three layers of leather. A single artisan can spend up to 25 hours painstakingly constructing a Kelly or Birkin.

And oh, the hides: silky smooth or pebbly textured calfskin; exotic lizard, crocodile and ostrich, in colors that span the spectrum. The immutable laws of supply, demand and merchandising are also at work here. Make something fabulous, in fabulously limited quantities, and people will clamor to own it. At Hermes in Fairfax -- where just a handful of objects cost under $150, such as those itty-bitty leather holders for Post-it notes -- 200 people fervently await the arrival 60 Birkins in any given season, said manager Sams-Manning. Their names are entered onto what she calls "a wish list."

The classic Hermes handbag, known as the "Kelly" since 1956, was joined in the early 1980s by the "Birkin."

Such controlled scarcity explains why the resale market is so strong.

Two years ago, an anonymous Midwesterner put 11 Hermes bags on the auction block at Doyle New York, including a 2002 black crocodile Birkin she had customized with 484 small diamonds set in the white-gold hardware. The presale estimate was $25,000 to $35,000, but when the hammer fell, the winning bidder ponied up $64,250.

"It was bought ostensibly by a gentleman for his wife," said Clare Watson, Doyle's director of couture, noting that the victor outbid another deep-pocketed chap.

In April, Inga Guen sold one consignment client a taupe ostrich Kelly for $6,000 and told another that the Birkin she'd just bought on eBay was a fake. Taped to the top of the desk in her cluttered office is the small tipsheet Guen penned to help patrons avoid getting scammed: The stitching "is diagonal /////// not horizontal -------." Or as she later explained, "the stitching goes always uphill."

So, apparently, does the satisfaction level among chic women who may save for years to buy one. "I treated myself to a Birkin when I was still working, before my first child was born," said one fashionista, seeking anonymity "because my husband has no idea how much it cost."

The very luckiest women get them the old-fashioned way; well, actually, the second-oldest old-fashioned way -- as a family legacy.

"I think I have about six or seven," said Veronique Danforth, public information service coordinator at the World Bank. "I am French, so I have been raised with those bags around me. I got my first one when I was 17. Some are 40 years old and look as if they were bought yesterday."
 
Last edited by a moderator:
NY Times
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, San Serif][SIZE=-1]Style and Grace: The original Kelly was large enough to carry a saddle. In the 30's Hermes scaled it down to a handbag, just the right size, as Grace Kelly discovered, to hide a pregnant bulge from paparazzi. In 2004 Jean Paul Gaultier created the even more diminutive Kelly Pochette. Top: Hermes crocodile Kelly mini Pochette, $7,800. At Hermes stores. Bottom: Vintage Hermes calfskin Kelly bag[/SIZE][/FONT]
 

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