Skip to main content

Hermes La Cle Des Champs

Hermes Vintage Jacquard Silk Carre Scarf La Cle des Champs by Francoise Faconnet
By Hermès
Located in Nice, FR
HERMES vintage jacquard silk carré scarf LA CLE DES CHAMPS, designed by FRANCOISE FACONNET
Category

20th Century French Scarves

People Also Browsed

1953 Rare First Edition Hermes Attelages by H. Grygkar Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in Paris, FR
Hermes silk scarf Attelages or Mail Coaches by Hugo Grygkar featuring a yellow border, a mail coaches scene. The designer Hugo Grygkar and the scarf name are not mentioned on. It is ...
Category

1950s French Scarves

Hermes Ciels Byzantins by J.Abadie Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in Paris, FR
1997 Hermes silk scarf Ciels Byzantins by J.Abadie featuring a jacquard ground, a yellow border and a Hermès signature. Circa: 1997 In good vintage condition. Made in France. 35,4in...
Category

Late 20th Century French Scarves

Hermès La Femme aux Semelles de Vent 90 cm Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in Palm Beach, FL
This authentic Hermès La Femme aux Semelles de Vent Silk Scarf is mint condition with the box. Designed by Aline Honore and issued in 2009. 100% silk 90 cm scarf features a wintry ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary French Scarves

Adidas ZX Flux W/ Rita Ora Womens Sneakers (10 US)
Located in Montreal, Quebec
Featuring a smooth finish leather upper with shiny dotted suede overlays, padded ankle cuff and tongue offers support and comfort, torsion system for mid foot integrity, durable rubb...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Vietnamese Shoes

Recent Sales

1990's Hermes La Cle des Champs Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in Wallkill, NY
New Old Stock, never worn has been folded and stored away for years! *Pale Blue with Gold accents *Birds a flutter & Perched *Made in France *Handed rolled of c...
Category

1990s French Scarves

Hermes La Clé Des Champs by F. Faconnet Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in Paris, FR
Hermes silk scarf La Clé Des Champs by F. Faconnet featuring a birds scene, a light orange border
Category

Late 20th Century French Scarves

Hermès Red/Black La Cle des Champs Scarf
By Hermès
Located in West Hollywood, CA
Hermès collectible La Cle des Champs silk twill scarf in red and black. Designed by Françoise
Category

21st Century and Contemporary French Scarves

Rare Mid-Century "La Clé des Champs" Hermés Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in New York, NY
. Scarf retains original box folds, a true gem for the Hermés collector.
Category

Mid-20th Century French Scarves

Hermes Pink La Cle des Champs by Françoise Faconnet Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in Paris, FR
Hermes silk scarf "La Cle des Champs" by Françoise Faconnet featuring a pink jacquard ground, a
Category

1990s French Scarves

Hermes Vintage Jacquard Silk Carre Scarf La Cle des Champs by Francoise Faconnet
By Hermès
Located in Nice, FR
HERMES vintage rare jacquard silk carré scarf LA CLE DES CHAMPS featuring birds adorned with gold
Category

20th Century French Scarves

Hermès Vintage Enamel Bracelet La Clé Des Champs Birds Gold Hdw Size GM 70
By Hermès
Located in FR
Beautiful Authentic Hermès Bracelet Pattern: Birds / From "La Clé des Champs" Hermès pattern
Category

Late 20th Century Austrian More Bracelets

Materials

Gold Plate, Enamel

Hermes La Cle des Champs Jacquard Silk Scarf
By Hermès
Located in San Francisco, CA
Hermes La Cle des Champs scarf in jacquard silk. 34.5"x 35.5". Designed by Françoise Façonnet
Category

1990s Scarves

Collectible Hermes La Cle des Champs Silk Jacquard Scarf/Françoise Façonnet
By Hermès, Françoise Faconnet
Located in Palm Beach, FL
Rare Hermes La Cle des Champs Silk Jacquard Scarf by Françoise Façonnet is highly desired by
Category

Late 20th Century French Scarves

Hermes Scarf
By Hermès
Located in Stamford, CT
Hermes "La Cle Des Champs" by Francoise Faconnet in original box
Category

1980s French Scarves

Get Updated with New Arrivals
Save "Hermes La Cle Des Champs", and we’ll notify you when there are new listings in this category.

Hermès for sale on 1stDibs

For Hermès, what began as a maker of leather equestrian goods for European noblemen would eventually grow into one of the most storied fashion labels in the world. In 1837, German-born French entrepreneur Thierry Hermès opened a saddle and harness purveyor in Paris. Gradually, the house extended into accessories and luggage for its riders, and today, in paying homage to its origins, the family-run luxury brand resurfaces horse motifs in everything from clothing and modernist jewelry to pillows and handbags.

The first top-handled bag ever produced by Hermès was the Haut à courroies, which made its debut in 1892. A tall bag secured with a folded leather flap (fastened with bridle-inspired straps), it was designed to transport riding boots and a harness. As the world made the switch from horse to automobile, the bag adapted, becoming a multifunctional travel satchel instead of a designated saddlebag. Today, 120 years later, the HAC remains in Hermès’s line — and its distinctive flap and clasping straps have laid the groundwork for some of the house’s other iconic bags.

In the 1930s, Robert Dumas (son-in-law to Émile-Maurice Hermès, Thierry’s grandson) designed a smaller, trapezoidal take on the flap bag with a handle and two side straps. Later, actress Grace Kelly, then engaged to Prince Rainier of Monaco, is said to have used one of these bags to conceal her pregnancy during the 1950s. Because she was photographed constantly, the coverage catapulted her handbag to international popularity. In 1977, Hermès officially renamed the model for her, and the Kelly bag was born. Each Kelly bag takes between 18 and 25 hours to produce, and its 680 hand stitches owe solely to one Hermès artisan.

Robert Dumas was also responsible for another one of the brand’s most iconic offerings: the launch of its first silk scarf on the occasion of Hermès’s 100th anniversary in 1937. Based on a woodblock designed by Dumas and printed on Chinese silk, the accessory was an immediate hit.

Today, vintage Hermès scarves, typically adorned in rich colors and elaborate patterns, serve many functions, just as they did back then. Well-heeled women wear it on their heads, around their necks and, in a genius piece of cross-promotion, tied to the straps of their Hermès bags. Kelly even once used one as a sling for her broken arm.

In 1981, Robert Dumas’s son Jean-Louis Dumas, then Hermès chairman, found himself sitting next to French actress and musician Jane Birkin on a plane, where she was complaining about finding a suitable carryall for the necessary accoutrements of motherhood. After the two travelers were properly introduced, Birkin helped design Jean-Louis’s most famous contribution to the Hermès canon: the Birkin bag, a roomy, square catchall with the HAC’s trademark leather flap top and the addition of a lock and key. Owing to the brand’s legendary commitment to deft, handcrafted construction, the Birkin is an investment that is coveted by collectors everywhere.

While the Kelly and Birkin may be standouts, gracing the arms of everyone from royal heiresses to hip-hop stars in the past few decades, the handbags are but a small part of Hermès’s fashion offerings. Since the 1920s, the brand has produced some of the most desirable leather goods in the world. There’s the Constance bag, a favorite of Jacqueline Kennedy, the recently relaunched 1970s-era Evelyne and, on the vintage market, a slew of designs dating back to the 1920s.

Good design never goes out of style. Find a variety of vintage Hermès handbags, day dresses, shoes and more on 1stDibs.

Finding the Right scarves for You

We’ve long had a love affair with vintage and designer scarves. Every glamorous go-to ensemble deserves the lightweight finishing touch that can be added with this stylish, versatile accessory.

Scarves have held a distinctive place in the evolution of formal and casual wear for centuries. And although now firmly entrenched in western culture, the origins of this neckwear are global.

Egyptian Queen Nefertiti is known to have worn a finely woven scarf with a headdress, and Emperor Cheng of the Chinese Han dynasty presided over an army of warriors whose scarves denoted their rank. The idea of scarves as status symbols still persists; for example, silk scarves, which were favored by the upper class during the reign of Queen Victoria, are an out-of-reach luxury item, cost prohibitive for many consumers. However, the increasing diversity of available materials over the years has rendered this adornment more accessible since their early days.

Luxury houses and various designers helped elevate scarves and long, flowing wraps as a desirable fashion accessory during the 20th century.

Visionary Italian designer Emilio Puccithe first fashion designer to enter the lifestyle market — introduced abstractions and dazzling psychedelic elements to scarves, while mid-century era multidisciplinary American artist Vera Neumann drew on Japanese techniques to create exuberant textile designs based on her paintings and drawings.

Established in Paris in 1837, Hermès didn’t start creating their famously decorative scarves until 100 years later, in 1937. Before long, the Hermès scarf, then crafted from strong imported Chinese silk, became an iconic work favored by actresses such as Audrey Hepburn and Grace Kelly, a lifetime enthusiast of the family-owned brand. Hermès has produced over 2,000 different scarf designs in the decades since Robert Dumas, Émile-Maurice Hermès’s son-in-law, crafted the first one.

On 1stDibs, find a broad selection of vintage scarves that includes flamboyant and colorful accessories designed by Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent and more.