Bulk of $63K from sale of Louis and Katherine Kealoha’s Hawaii Kai home goes to uncle
HONOLULU (AP) — A judge’s ruling says the bulk of the money from the foreclosure sale of a house owned by a former Honolulu police chief and his estranged wife convicted of conspiracy must go to the relatives they bilked.
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The ruling addresses what to do with about $63,000 leftover from the sale of a Hawaii Kai home owned by Louis Kealoha, who retired as police chief in the midst of a federal corruption investigation, and his wife Katherine Kealoha, a former deputy prosecutor.
The ruling said about $62,000 should go to the trust for Katherine Kealoha’s uncle, Gerard Puana, and his now-deceased mother, Florence Puana.
The owner of Louis Vuitton and Dior is now selling unused luxury fabrics and leathers online from $4 a meter
LVMH — the luxury giant behind Dior, Louis Vuitton, and Celine – is now selling fabrics at discount prices.
The new online store, Nona Source, sells leftover fabrics and leathers from $4 a meter.
These unused fabrics come from LVMH’s high-end brands.
See more stories on Insider’s business page.
LVMH has started selling unused fabrics from its high-end brands, including Louis Vuitton, at bargain prices.
The new online shop, which went live on Monday and is called Nona Source, sells leftover materials from its sought-after fashion brands. A spokesperson for LVMH confirmed to Insider that all of LVMH’s fashion brands would provide fabric. LVMH owns Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior, Givenchy, Stella McCartney, and Celine, among others.
The store is Europe-only and LVMH said it had no plans to launch it in the US. It is open to certain business owners, such as fashion designers. Each buyer must set up an account, sharing their company name and registration number, to shop.
Potential buyers can search by fabric style, weight, and use. Prices start from €3 ($3.60) per meter for lining materials, and up to €50 ($60) per meter for cashmere.
The shop is part of LVMH’s push to become more sustainable in the next 10 years, via an initiative called Life 360. It has promised to upcycle and recycle clothes.
Read more: How the $286 billion luxury empire LVMH reinvented its diversity strategy
The store is led by a three-person team who previously worked at LVMH-owned brands. The trio came together in 2019 as part of LVMH’s Disrupt, Act, Risk to be an Entrepreneur (DARE) program, which lets LVMH’s thousands of employees pitch new ideas to management and turn these into real projects.
These employees are now working full-time on Nona Source.
Why Prince Louis started nursery later than his royal siblings
Why Prince Louis started nursery later than his royal siblings The young Prince is attending a London nursery
Prince Louis has just turned three years old and is now attending Willcocks Nursery School in London, just like his big sister Princess Charlotte did.
It’s an exciting time for the son of Prince William and Duchess Kate, who appeared in an official photo released for his birthday on 23 April. The royal looked adorable sitting on his balance bike dressed in a shirt, jumper and shorts as he made his way to nursery.
All three of the Cambridge children are now in childcare or school settings – but did you know that Louis started nursery later than his siblings?
MORE: 10 tips for teaching your child how to ride a bike – just like Prince Louis
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WATCH: Royal children on their first day of school
Whereas Prince George and Princess Charlotte went to nursery around the age of two and a half, Louis started at age three. It isn’t an unusual age for a child to begin nursery aged three, but we wondered why the Cambridges waited a little longer with their youngest?
MORE: How Archie Harrison’s education in the US is similar to cousin Prince Louis'
Prince Louis on his third birthday
Prince Louis' start to his education was likely delayed by the third COVID-19 lockdown in the UK.
The family lived at their Anmer Hall residence in Norfolk for much of the lockdowns, rather than their London home of Kensington Palace which is near to Willcocks nursery. So, instead of starting in January at the age of two-and-a-half like his older siblings, he began nursery at the start of Willcocks' summer term.
The Cambridge family
Prince George started nursery when he was two years and five months old, attending the Westacre Montessori School in Norfolk.
Meanwhile, Princess Charlotte started Willcocks Nursery School at the age of two years, eight months, following the family’s move to Apartment 1A at Kensington Palace in London.
MORE: 9 cheekiest balcony moments from royal children at Buckingham Palace
Willcocks is a short drive from the Cambridges' family home in Kensington. It operates from a hall of Holy Trinity Church, next door to the Royal Albert Hall and Kensington Gardens, and down the road from the Natural History Museum, Science Museum and Victoria and Albert museum, so Louis can expect various educational outings and visits to the park.
It’s likely that Louis will join George and Charlotte at Thomas’s Battersea School in September 2022 at the age of four.
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