When Bling, Couture and Controversy Define All’s Fair: The Most Expensive Pieces on Screen
The Hulu legal drama All’s Fair isn’t just making waves for its courtroom drama. The show’s costume design, jewellery and accessories have become headline‑makers in their own right, mixing high‑end pieces with vintage glamour — and stirring controversy. From dazzling diamonds to a rare elephant‑skin bag, the luxury worn on screen reveals more than wealth — it broadcasts status, identity and power.
The Jewellery That Turns Heads
From the first episode, All’s Fair has introduced viewers to a jewellery collection that would rival many high‑end auctions. According to reporting on the series’ costume and jewellery choices, some of the stand‑out pieces include:
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Pasquale Bruni “Goddess Garden” emerald‑and‑diamond collier + “Heart to Earth” earrings and matching rings — worn by the lead character (played by Kim Kardashian). The pieces reportedly combine roughly 40 carats of diamonds and about 20 carats of emeralds.
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The collier and accompanying pieces are meant to convey duality — strength and femininity — and to mirror the character’s powerful presence on screen.
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Jacob & Co. “Lucky You” ring — worn by another character (played by Naomi Watts) in the jewellery‑closet/auction scenes.

Lucky You ring
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A vintage floral brooch by Verdura — described as featuring a mix of gemstones (pink topaz, aquamarine, emeralds) and diamonds. In the show, this becomes part of a divorce‑division storyline, symbolising legacy, wealth, and emotional weight.
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Pieces from Tiffany & Co., including diamond-encrusted brooches and earrings — visible in one of the auction‑scene sequences, underlining the show’s blend of glamour and high stakes.
These aren’t just props. The jewellery mounted on screen echoes real‑world luxury design: Pasquale Bruni pieces, for example, in real life retail for tens of thousands of pounds. For context, some high-end Pasquale Bruni necklaces and earrings are listed at over £10,000–£15,000+ on leading luxury jewellery retailers.
Meanwhile, the vintage Verdura brooch and other rare items evoke the kind of jewellery auction lots that — depending on provenance, condition, and rarity could command significant sums from collectors.
The Elephant‑Skin Birkin: Luxury That Sparks Outrage
But the most controversial and expensive accessory on All’s Fair isn’t jewellery it’s a bag. In recent press coverage, the show has drawn fierce criticism for featuring what appears to be a rare, vintage elephant‑skin version of the iconic Hermès Birkin bag, carried by the character played by Kim Kardashian.
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This Birkin reportedly dates to a 1980s custom order a time when exotic skins were more commonly used in ultra‑luxury goods.
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On the resale market, unusual or rare Hermès Birkins — especially those made from exotic or discontinued materials — are known to fetch six‑figure prices, underlining just how expensive this on‑screen accessory likely is (though an exact valuation in public sources has not been confirmed).
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The bag’s appearance triggered immediate backlash, with critics calling it “disgusting” and “shameful,” and sparking broader debate about exotic‑skin fashion, ethics, and sustainability.
For many viewers, the elephant‑skin Birkin isn’t just a luxury status symbol. It represents a moral, environmental and cultural flashpoint a contrast against the show’s diamond‑adorned glamour and courtroom power plays.

What All This Luxury Means in Context
In All’s Fair, jewellery and accessories are more than shiny extras — they’re storytelling devices. They reflect wealth, past histories, power dynamics, relationships, and emotional stakes.
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The Pasquale Bruni necklace and diamonds highlight the lead’s character as someone powerful, confident and alluring.
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The vintage Verdura brooch and other auction items illustrate legacy, value, and conflict — tangible reminders of what’s at stake in divorce, betrayal or wealth redistribution.
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The elephant‑skin Birkin pushes the boundaries mixing glamour with controversy, status with moral complexity.
Real‑world values for many of the items shown can run into tens of thousands or, in the case of rare vintage or exotic‑skin items, potentially six‑figure valuations if traded on auction markets or resale networks.
That contrast — between glamour and ethics, value and controversy adds an extra layer of drama to the show. It’s not just about legal battles or personal conflict. It’s about how wealth, heritage, identity and aesthetics collide when the world is watching.
Why the Jewellery and Bag Make This Show More Than Just a Drama
The inclusion of such high‑value jewellery and exotic accessories transforms All’s Fair into a voyeuristic peek into the lives of the ultra‑wealthy but also forces viewers to confront what those luxuries mean in 2025.
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It magnifies the stakes of personal and financial conflict: jewellery becomes more than decoration it’s assets, legacies and bargaining chips.
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It raises questions about ethics and responsibility: a rare elephant‑skin bag may signal status, but it also carries moral weight in a world where sustainability and animal welfare are increasingly important.
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It taps into real‑world market dynamics: luxury goods, vintage jewellery and rare accessories hold real value, often traded across high-end auctions and collectors’ circles.
In short, the glamour on screen isn’t just for show it reflects real wealth, real value, and real consequences.













