Kardashian frames the auction as humanitarian mission — 'the right to a lawyer shouldn't depend on the balance of your bank account,' she wrote, directing proceeds to LAFLA for women seeking restraining orders and custody agreements.
Not everything from Allura Grant's controversial wardrobe made the cut — notably absent were the thong-bearing skirt suit that generated headlines at premiere and the elephant Birkin bag. Even so, top archival pieces commanded serious collector interest.
The John Galliano Fall/Winter 1995 set sold for $100,200 after six bids; the Christian Dior Spring/Summer 2001 four-piece ensemble fetched $100,100. Both exceed six figures — but a Thierry Mugler blazer listed at $3,500 didn't sell.
Two archival designer pieces cleared $200K combined — proof that Kardashian's 'All Fair' fashion legacy commands collector respect even if critics eviscerated the show. The real win? A quarter-million dollars for women who can't afford legal representation.
Kim Kardashian just proved that her "All's Fair" wardrobe is worth its weight in serious cash — and a worthy cause. The Skims mogul raised $247,200 for the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles through a three-day auction on Kardashian Kloset, moving 14 of 24 wardrobe lots from her Hulu legal drama. But the real story is in those archival numbers.
Two pieces did the heavy lifting. An archival John Galliano Fall/Winter 1995 set — a black angora jacket with sculptural collar and cuffs, paired with a satin maxi skirt — sold for $100,200 after six bidders fought it out. Kardashian wore this look to the show's Los Angeles press event in October 2025. Close behind at $100,100 was a four-piece Christian Dior set from Galliano's Spring/Summer 2001 collection: a red Chinoiserie-print silk coat, strapless gown with python trim, coordinating clutch and floral hair pin. That ensemble appeared in episode two of the Ryan Murphy-created series.
The auction briefly went haywire when bogus bids sent figures into the tens of millions — the Galliano set hit an eye-popping $80 million before corrections. But the final numbers speak for themselves: over $247K going directly to LAFLA, which provides free legal representation to women seeking restraining orders and custody agreements.
Not every piece found a buyer, though. A Thierry Mugler blazer with a corseted mesh waist listed at $3,500 went unsold. The more wearable pieces performed better: a white Boss button-down Kardashian wore oversized as a dress on the show fetched $500 — humble by comparison, but a sale nonetheless.
Kardashian announced the auction on X with characteristically pointed messaging: "The right to a lawyer shouldn't depend on the balance of your bank account." She's been pursuing a law degree through California's law office study program since 2019, though she revealed last fall she hasn't passed the bar. "I'm not a lawyer yet, I just play a very well-dressed one on TV," she quipped at the time. The irony isn't lost — but neither is the impact.
The show itself debuted to a brutal 0% on Rotten Tomatoes, yet became Hulu's biggest scripted premiere in three years and has already been renewed for season two. Critics savaged it, but collectors clearly weren't listening.