Celebrities Are Obsessed With This Cool-Girl Jewelry Brand — and It's On Rare Sale for Prime Day
Amazon Prime Day is still going strong, and amid deals on Bella Hadid's Coach bag and discounted Levi shorts, we uncovered another hidden gem: Jenny Bird—the affordable jewelry brand beloved by countless celebrities—is offering up to 25 percent off a range of bestsellers.
That includes the brand's Chunky Doune earrings, worn by both Selena Gomez and Hailey Bieber, as well as the Faye Knocker Hoops (now under $100) as seen on Celine Dion.
Jenny Bird's A-list roster also includes Taylor Swift, who wore a custom Jenny Bird choker in her "Look What You Made Me Do" music video. Bella Hadid has been spotted in the brand's Icon Hoop earrings—though sadly, those aren't on sale this time around.
Prime Day wraps on July 11, which means you only have a few days left to score these celeb-approved summer accessories. Scroll on to shop more of our Jenny Bird favorites before they sell out or return to full price.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Elle
2 hours ago
- Elle
Want to Hear More of Paul Mescal and Josh O'Connor Singing? Us, Too
Every item on this page was chosen by an ELLE editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy. Paul Mescal is sitting in bed looking sad and gorgeous again. That seems to be a recurring theme throughout a number of the movie star's most famous projects (think: Aftersun, Normal People, and All of Us Strangers), but his upcoming film, The History of Sound, deserves particular attention for connecting him with yet another infamously scruffy romantic lead: Josh O'Connor, beloved for his roles in Challengers, La Chimera, and The Crown. In The History of Sound, adapted from author Ben Shattuck's short story of the same name, Mescal and O'Connor play Lionel and David, both folk music aficionados, who meet in 1917 at the Boston Conservatory. After World War I, they reunite in 1920 to travel through Maine, collecting and preserving traditional folk songs—and embarking on a love affair along the way. The film first premiered at the Cannes Film Festival earlier this spring, and ELLE's critic proclaimed the period piece 'quietly epic' and 'a masterclass in tender restraint.' Here's what we know about the project so far. Alongside Mescal and O'Connor, the film stars Molly Price, Alison Bartlett, and Chris Cooper, per Deadline—though it seems primarily intended as a star vehicle for its charismatic male leads. Oliver Hermanus (Living) directed The History of Sound, with cinematography by Alexander Dynan and the screenplay by Shattuck himself. After its Cannes debut, Mubi bought North American distribution rights, and Focus Features snagged international. In the U.S., The History of Sound will land in theaters on September 12, 2025, with a likely MUBI streaming release to follow. Yes—and it features both O'Connor and Mescal singing. It'll be well worth the price of a ticket just to hear more. This story will be updated.


Elle
3 hours ago
- Elle
Blake Lively on 'Gossip Girl' Hair, Bedazzling, and the Art of the Ponytail
Every item on this page was chosen by an ELLE editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy. Blake Lively's hair is full of secrets, and she's ready to share them, live. She'll start with a confession about butter. 'With how much I love butter, I'm honestly surprised there isn't a butter scent in these products,' she says. With the launch of her hair care brand Blake Brown, Lively has already shared some hair secrets with the world, including the idea of replacing traditional conditioners (her line has none) with moisturizing hair masks. But today she has more hair lore to share, even if it's not a butter-scented hair mist (but who knows, maybe next time). She'll do it with a live hot rollers tutorial on her niece, Kate, for a group of beauty editors. To prepare, she hands Kate the rings that she is wearing on almost each finger for safekeeping. A set of 30 hot rollers is warmed up and waiting for her in the corner. She applies a generous amount (about two palmfuls) of Blake Brown mousse to Kate's wet hair, while blowing it dry with a pink Mason Pearson brush. Her niece's strawberry blonde hair impressively doubles in size. Over the course of the next hour, Lively wraps Kate's head in rollers with the assuredness of someone who has done this many times, teases and fluffs her hair up until it has the texture of cotton candy, and wraps the room in a visible, sweet-smelling haze of berry and vanilla scent, from their newest product, Blake Brown Classic Hairspray. I lose count of the number of sprays somewhere after 37. 'I was once on a shoot and the hairdresser used three full cans of hairspray in one day. Three!' she says, describing how the liberal application had given her an all-day long, Veronica Lake-esque hair style. Her experience in working with some of the greatest hair stylists in the world inspired her to create a hairspray that is buildable, flexible, and not sticky. In the final unveiling of the look, Kate has the bouncy, smooth curls of a Hollywood actress, courtesy of one herself. After the demo, talked to Lively one-on-one about putting to rest an internet rumor, her love for bedazzling, and why she thinks her Gossip Girl hairstyle became The Rachel of the 2000s. Someone asked me, 'Who is shaving in the background?' But no, it's someone painting their toenails. I didn't grow up knowing the smell of black currant, but in my late teens or early 20s, the candles that I was most drawn to were that scent. Votivo did beautiful ones, and they also had a red currant one that they were well known for. It's a smell that is nostalgic to me. Layering in vanilla and woodsiness modernizes the scent a bit. I always like when things have a bit of femininity and masculinity. This does that beautifully, and smells really great with the other formulas, too. My bad hair days are usually when I have done a lot to my hair. On a movie, you can be doing many different looks and time periods. It's not a normal thing to go through six distinct hair looks in one day. I'm lucky because I do have people who take good care of my hair, but I [still] notice the difference. It's rough when the job is over and it's summertime, and you're left with the aftermath. I've learned that when putting my hair through something intense, even if it's just a few days of press, I have to give back to it. If I am doing my own hair, then it's when I use hot rollers. It's so plumping and it quadruples [the size of] my hair. I work with such incredible hairdressers and sit in their chairs. Jennifer Yepez does this curl pattern with an iron that is so beautiful. She's like, I learned this from one of the greats. It's not a normal twist. It's long and spirally, so my hair becomes like a princess or a mermaid. To be compared to 'The Rachel' is the highest compliment. Our hairdresser [on Gossip Girl], Jennifer Johnson, is amazing. She's one of my best friends still, and so cool. We had so many looks, and we would do maybe 18 different ones in an episode, and we also did 20 to 27 episodes a year. As with 'The Rachel,' part of the reason for its popularity may be that there was a familiarity and ease from being in someone's home every week. You get to know a person, character, style, and look. It was also aspirational, because [in real life], people don't get dressed [like that] and do their hair every day. I surely don't do my hair every day. [Today I just] got in the shower and came here. For years and years, we did a curling iron. There was a period where I was trying to help my hair because it had been through a lot. I had dyed it red and then had to redye it to go back to blonde. We were like, Let's try to achieve as much as possible with this little impact. We did lots of braids and things like the bun that didn't require heat. It gave a nice, smooth wave. But I did not only have air-dried hair during Gossip Girl. We were shooting in New York City, in the heat. Sometimes that is the intent. You wear a ponytail to pull your face back. People will put braids right [around the temples], which anchor and pull your face back. I've never done those braids before. Usually, when I do a tight bun or ponytail, my face can go back a little. But sometimes you want a really great hair look that pulls your hair back, and then you see your face later and you're like, Oh my gosh, it totally changed the shape of my face. I went to the Golden Globes with my husband right after I gave birth to my daughter, [around] 2017. I remember seeing the pictures, and I was like, Oh, my face looks different because my hair was pulled so tight. But day-to-day, I usually wear ponytails to restore my hair. It's like my 'day off' look. I used the Pre-Shampoo this weekend and did a ponytail and a braid. Oh, thank you, I think it's a brand called Emi-Jay. I got some other ones on Etsy that were really cute, and they fell apart right away, which is very sad. Then I went to Hobby Lobby, and I saw all the details that were on the Etsy ones, and I was like, That's where they get them from! I used to bedazzle my phone in high school and my iPod. Then it got stolen. I was sad, but I didn't blame them either because I understood—it was so pretty. It was coral but iridescent. I like a sparkle. I know I'm supposed to grow out of that. There was a period where I thought, Okay, I'm a New Yorker. I'm meant to grow up and modernize. Then you get old enough to really think, No, I want to have the things that make me happy—which is pink glitter tape from Hobby Lobby all over my car, which is so tacky and terrible. It's just bedazzled dashboard tape. It's 99 cents. I can't tell if my kids love it or are embarrassed. This interview has been condensed and edited.


Elle
3 hours ago
- Elle
Every Selena Gomez Hair Era, From Teen Waves to the Sleek Platinum Bob
Few can say they skipped past the awkward teen phase of questionable makeup choices and embarrassing hair moments, but Selena Gomez is one of them. Journeying through a decades worth of TV episodes, music videos, red carpet appearances, and Instagram posts is far more inspiring than it is cringe-worthy. The big-bounce curly blow-dry I'm still trying to master? She perfected it back in 2010. Her lived-in caramel balayage and wispy bangs of 2016? I'm taking it to my hairdresser this month. 'Selena has this amazing ability to switch effortlessly from one genre to another,' says Neale Rodger, style director at STIL Salon in London. 'She's mastered retro waves, sleek, center-parted lobs, ashy blondes, retro-inspired updos, supermodel lengths, full-coverage bangs…practically everything.' Though the Rare Beauty founder has never strayed far from her chocolate tresses, she's served up heaps of hairstyle inspiration since she arrived on TV screens in 2007, and each look is as covetable and copy-worthy today as it was then. Whether it's her chest-length natural curls in 2014, her blonde experiments in 2017, or the chic tousled lob she recently debuted, where better to look than the Gomez archives when your brunette lengths are in need of a facelift? Ahead, we've curated a timeline of Gomez's most iconic hair looks from her Wizards of Waverly Place days to now. Congratulations, Sel! We all know how important a crisp, understated mani is when we hear wedding bells, but she also reminded us to remember our hairdo. Her baroque bob is fairly simple: it's a one-length, blunt cut, but it's the styling that sets it apart. Blown-out and flicked-in, its name derives from the elaborate charm of early 17th-century art and architecture. 'Health and wealth signaling are two key themes in hair trends at the moment, and this luxurious yet modern look ticks both boxes very well,' shares hair forecaster Tom Smith. She turned heads with her shoulder-grazing long bob at the world premiere of the new Disney spin-off show, Wizards Beyond Waverly Place. With a singular loose wave, positioned skillfully beside her jaw to enhance and define her face shape, this lob screams elegance and sophistication. Her equestrian-style ponytail was a standout red carpet moment at the Emilia Pérez premiere, which took place at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival. Neatly slicked and elegantly perched at the crown of her head, this sleek updo is incredibly glamorous and complimented her off-the-shoulder gown perfectly. Looking to put a new-season twist on your monochrome tresses? Feather a honey blonde hue in and around the hair. It adds subtle dimension and feels different enough when you look in the mirror, without completely transforming your look. Gomez demonstrates that perfectly here. The French-girl bob has never looked so chic. It has enough Parisian charm and sultry, just-rolled-out-of-bed texture to last a lifetime. To recreate the look at home, lift the hair away from the face and mist a texturizing spray into the roots. Or, just roll out of bed! At this 2019 meet-and-greet in California, Gomez proved that brunette balayage really can be subtle. Not a blonde strand in sight; instead, her inky roots graduate into a mousy hazel-brown, adding depth without stark demarcation. Who remembers blond Selena? Spotted out and about in London in 2017, the megastar styled her newly buttered lengths into a boho-style wave and with wispy full fringe. Brunettes, take note: incorporating a root smudge is key to masking harsh regrowth if you're considering taking the platinum plunge. The bangs that made us all want bangs. We're still obsessed with her wispy fringe and syrupy caramel balayage era. At Louis Vuitton's cruise 2016 show in California, Gomez subbed her signature chestnut hue for this near-black shade. Loosely crimped to add natural texture? Very 2015. Some may say Gomez was ahead of her time with these copper-brown highlights. Playing to her hair's natural undertone, these ultra-warm strands instantly add depth and dimension without being overwhelming. For the 2011 American Music Awards, Gomez tried an Old Hollywood curl on for size, paired with a swept side part and a finish so glossy it's literally reflecting light. Perhaps my favorite look of all. The 22nd Annual MuchMusic Video Awards in 2011 saw Gomez sport a tighter ringlet-style curl than she'd worn previously. To replicate this look, resist brushing your curls out once cooled and apply hairspray to set them in place. The highly covetable blow-dry in question. Gomez was in her element at the 2010 Wizards of Waverly Place fashion show, where her natural chocolate strands were perfectly coiffed into a voluminous, bouncy curl. Her layers serve this style well, adding body and shape to give the appearance of thicker hair. In 2009, Gomez debuted a rounded bob with a thin side-fringe and fine, golden highlights. This shapely crop would go on to become her go-to hairstyle, experimenting with various fringes, lengths, and textures to boot. The 2008 NCLR Alma Awards saw Gomez gather her glossy espresso tresses into a loose bun, fit with a swooping side-fringe. Asymmetry was all the rage in 2008: think ponytails, fringes, plaits, and buns all worn off-center. Perhaps her most iconic and internet-famous hairstyle of all? This electric blue moment for the 2007 Teen Vogue Party, of course (cue the viral interview clip). A very Alex Russo move, if you ask us.