Fashion

From Big’s Funeral Cards to Carrie’s Kitschy Cat Pillow: Shopping the ‘And Just Like That’ Auction

Among Miranda’s vintage Issey Miyake and Charlotte’s Prada, you’ll find the real gems—like Big’s Peloton water bottle and a Chez Diaz bundle.

By Elliot O·Apr 30, 2026·2 min read
From Big’s Funeral Cards to Carrie’s Kitschy Cat Pillow: Shopping the ‘And Just Like That’ Auction

Reported by Vogue.

The fantasy of rifling through Carrie Bradshaw's legendary closet is about to become purchasable reality. Julien's Auctions just opened bidding on over 500 props from And Just Like That—the HBO spinoff that limped through three seasons before getting the axe in August 2025—and the inventory reads like a maximalist fever dream. We're talking Manolo Blahnik shoe boxes (the actual pumps mysteriously absent, though Polaroids of them are included), designer handbags, statement furniture, and, yes, merchandise commemorating Big's death. It's Sex and the City in its most unhinged, commodified form.

The auction isn't just about collecting luxury goods—it's about owning a specific moment in prestige television's increasingly chaotic evolution. A vintage Issey Miyake coat from Miranda's wardrobe starts at a reasonable bid, while Charlotte's Prada gingham coat has already tripled its estimate at $1,750. If you're hunting for steals, Seema's Saint Laurent blouses and Lisa's Hermès pieces are surprisingly accessible at under $300. But the real treasure hunt is elsewhere: Carrie's mid-century cat-embroidered pillows ($700), her personalized phone cases ($50), and yes, her actual trash cans are all up for grabs. According to Vogue, this is less about acquiring fashion and more about purchasing emotional real estate in a show most of us watched out of obligation rather than genuine love.

The Unhinged Lots You Didn't Know You Needed

Then there are the items that exist in their own category of bewildering. Big's funeral cards, a funeral home planning guide, and a childhood photo of his dog Gogi bundle together for $300—a lot that asks the question: who greenlit this? The "Loved and Lost: A Memoir" (Carrie's in-show book about losing Big) features a somber dust jacket wrapping an entirely unrelated novel and carries a $1,750 price tag. Hot Fellas bakery signage, complete with a topless, baguette-wielding man, is currently at $450. Even the mundane stuff gets surreal: Big's Peloton water bottle, shower knobs, glasses, and dry cleaning comprise a $200 lot that feels less like memorabilia and more like someone's junk drawer.

For the truly flush, Anthony Marantino's Louis Vuitton bags sit at $4,000, and the engraved fake Rolex Carrie gifted Big hovers near $5,000. The price points are wild and arbitrary—a reflection of how the show itself operated: expensive in the most random ways, impossible to justify, but somehow impossible to look away from. Whether you're bidding on nostalgia, actual wearable pieces, or kitschy home décor, the auction is essentially asking: how much is a complicated relationship with a problematic show actually worth?

If you want to feel like you're part of the inner circle without the actual friendship drama, now's your chance to buy the fantasy—one overpriced lot at a time.


Read the original at Vogue.

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