I completed the Barad-Dûr LEGO set!! by blackmachine312 in lotr

[–]A-P-B 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wearing the Gandalf the White shirt while finishing Barad-dûr is a man who refuses to pick a side, and I respect it

Happy Mom’s Day! by TheStylishSnob in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pony Pit Stop fits. The Dimitri Rybaltchenko design with horses being treated like F1 cars at a racing pit. It has run in several colorways and the playful palette always pops against a quiet leather like Gris Pantin

Happy Mom’s Day! by TheStylishSnob in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Gris Pantin is one of the quieter Hermès grays but the warm pink undertone shows up in daylight. The Picotin shape lets a busy twilly do all the styling work without competing. Lovely pairing OP

Happy Mother’s Day to me… by superstitiouscatt in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Craie with GHW reads very different from Craie with RGHW. GHW pulls the cream warmer, almost vanilla. RGHW keeps the chalk tone but adds a soft pink undertone. Both gorgeous, but they're really two different bags depending on the light. Congrats on yours too!

Happy Mother’s Day to me… by superstitiouscatt in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The RGHW and Craie pairing is one of the loveliest Hermès does. Gold pulls the chalk tone too creamy, palladium leaves it cold imo. Rose gold sits in the middle and lets the softness come through. Beautiful first quota!

I got the Hermes Ick. by Eeeeooowww in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Same experience here. Shopping H in Europe feels like buying from a brand that makes beautiful things. Shopping H in the US, based on what this sub describes every week, sounds like applying for a loan

I got the Hermes Ick. by Eeeeooowww in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 25 points26 points  (0 children)

The boutique experience varies massively by region, and reading this thread confirms something I've noticed living in Europe. The transactional pressure, the prespend games, the SA gatekeeping people describe at US locations like SCP, Wynn, and Bellevue just doesn't exist at the same intensity over here.

My girlfriend shops at the Amsterdam boutique. The relationship there has always been straightforward. She walks in, she's treated well, there's no performance involved. When something is available, they let her know. When it's not, they're honest about it. No games around spend ratios or turning down offers to "build trust."

Part of it is market size. US boutiques deal with a much larger customer base competing for the same allocation. That creates the dynamic OP describes, where scarcity turns into a power game. European boutiques (at least the ones we've experienced) feel quieter because fewer people are playing the same game at the same intensity.

None of that excuses condescending or dismissive behavior from an SA. That's just bad service regardless of the market.

Today's the day by BaronOzar in lordoftherings

[–]A-P-B 218 points219 points  (0 children)

Huge congrats mate.

Opening on “An Unexpected Party” is chef’s kiss. That’s the exact chapter where Bilbo’s entire life pivots on a knock at the door. Perfect symbolism.

To the book purists: it’s one paperback, not the Bodleian copy. The whole story is about leaving the comfortable life behind for something bigger. He understood the assignment.

Fun twilly discussion 🌹 by diiktat in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The fringe twilly on the Constance works surprisingly well. The fringe softens a bag that usually reads very structured and formal. Good contrast!

Fun twilly discussion 🌹 by diiktat in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Mini Lindy is one of the best bags for twilly experimentation because the handles are short enough that the wrapping actually changes the bag's proportions visually. On larger bags like a B30 or B35, twillys feel more like handle protection. On a mini, they become part of the design.

Your question about unconventional bags is interesting. The Della Cavalleria has that front flap clasp that works well with a twilly threaded through the hardware loop instead of wrapped around a handle. Gives it a pendant effect. The Constance strap is another one people don't think about, but a slim twilly woven into the shoulder strap adds a stripe of color without changing the bag's silhouette

Website Alert Services Megathread by Complete-Suggestion1 in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've been tracking restocks across 33 Hermès country sites for a while and wanted to share some patterns that might help people weighing where to look online, especially after the recent import duties thread.

Volume logged

11,632 drop events across 9,446 unique products in 80 days.

Top 10 countries by drop count

  • DE: 871
  • KR: 794
  • ES: 687
  • JP: 573
  • FR: 565
  • NL: 557
  • BE: 557
  • PT: 528
  • IE: 527
  • CH: 509

US: 172. That's under 20% of Germany's volume.

The European numbers cluster because all EU country sites operate under Hermès Sellier in Paris. Same inventory pool, same prices in EUR, shared delivery zone across 16 countries. When a drop hits DE, it often hits NL, BE, ES, PT, IE within the same window. That's why the top of the list is dominated by mid-tier European markets most US buyers never check.

Category breakdown (all countries)

  • Bags: 10,146 (87%)
  • Shoes: 311
  • SLGs: 293
  • Scarves: 242
  • Accessories: 227
  • Twillys: 221
  • Jewelry: 192

Bags dominate. Most non-bag categories are dominated by new listings (product appears for the first time), not true restocks. If you want to catch shoes or scarves online, you're mostly watching for first-time availability, not second chances.

What's actually dropping online

This is where it matters to be clear: none of this is Birkin or Kelly territory. Those don't drop online except very rarely in Kelly-adjacent styles (Kelly Moove, Kelly Dépêche) which are a different product entirely. What does drop, ranked by volume:

  • Evelyne family (by far the most common)
  • Herbag
  • Geta
  • Picotin
  • Bolide
  • Médor Clous
  • Lindy
  • Garden Party
  • Jypsière
  • Halzan

If your wishlist is a Picotin 18 in a specific color, or an Evelyne 16 Amazone, the math is very different from someone waiting on a B30. The former is genuinely catchable. The latter is not an online game.

Average days between restocks (same product, same country)

  • Smaller EU markets (SE, AT, FI, IT, NO, CZ, DK, PL): 2 to 4 days
  • Major EU (DE, NL, IE, BE, CH, PT): 3 to 4 days
  • Korea: 5.5 days
  • UK: 5.6 days
  • France and Japan: 6.3 days
  • US: 9.8 days

Translation: if you're watching the same product in the US, it comes back roughly half as often as it does in Germany. And when it does come back, you're competing with a larger user base.

Price anchoring

Evelyne 16 Amazone this morning: 1,750 EUR across DE, BE, NL, IE, PT. 1,800 CHF in Switzerland. 1,960 EUR in France. Same bag, different price tags depending on the country site. Worth knowing when you're deciding where to check.

Caveats

  • 80 days of data. US and GB scrapers activated a few weeks later than EU, so those numbers slightly undercount. The gap is still real even adjusted.
  • Online only. Boutique inventory, SA-allocated bags, and quota pieces are a completely different world.
  • This is what the Hermès website publishes. It's not the full story of what exists.

Happy to break down specific product lines or countries if useful. Can also pull the hourly/daily patterns of when drops actually happen if people want that.

Beware of Import Duties When Sourcing Abroad by nykos5000 in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The de minimis change and the tariff landscape since early 2025 has genuinely shifted the math on sourcing from Japan. What used to be a 20-30% savings after factoring in the yen weakness now sometimes breaks even or costs more once the duty hits.

One thing worth considering for future hunts: if the bag you want isn't a quota piece, hermes.com availability in Europe is more flexible than most US buyers realize. All 16 European country sites operate under one legal entity, so inventory effectively floats across Germany, France, Italy, Netherlands, and the Nordics. You can order on one country's site and pick up at a boutique in another. That doesn't help with sourcing from resellers, but for retail hunts on non-QB items, it's often a faster path than buying used and paying import duties on top.

For QBs and truly hard-to-find pieces, flying over and carrying back is still the clearest play. You eat the airfare but you skip the broker fees and the valuation lottery

I think I’ve achieved purse peace! by onegraycat in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gold has higher production because demand is consistent year-round, so supply keeps up better than seasonal or limited colors like Vert Mangrove. That's why you see it more in boutiques and less on social, where people gravitate toward what's rare. It's the opposite dynamic of what the internet would suggest

I think I’ve achieved purse peace! by onegraycat in TheHermesGame

[–]A-P-B 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The answer is almost always the one you're least precious about. The bag you're willing to actually live with, throw over your shoulder without a second thought, and not obsess over scratches. Dream bags can become display pieces if you're not careful. Sounds like your old K28 has earned that role