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The Luxury Jewelry That Sparkled Brightest At Paris Couture Week
The Luxury Jewelry That Sparkled Brightest At Paris Couture Week

Forbes

time17-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

The Luxury Jewelry That Sparkled Brightest At Paris Couture Week

Composition No. 4, Ikebana-style jewels by Boucheron, on show at Paris Couture Week. A cyclamen ... More brooch, oat stalk hair jewels, caterpillar brooch and butter fly hairpin. It was a rich Couture Week in Paris earlier this month, with houses from Boucheron to Buccellati showing their latest luxury jewels, alongside independent designers like Jessica McCormack and Dries Criel. Boucheron The summer Carte Blanche collection from Claire Choisne and her team is consistently spectacular, but this season's collection stayed with editors for days after the Place Vendôme presentation. Continuing the nature theme of the January high jewelry collection, Impermanence explored the life cycle of nature from budding to decay, through six Japanese Ikebana-style floral jewelry compositions. Each one comprised a vase, botanical elements, and an insect; 28 high jewelry pieces designed to be worn on the body in different ways. Compositions ranged from light — glass, mother-of-pearl, diamonds, and 3D-printed plant resin ingeniously sewn with diamonds to avoid adding metal weight — to dark — onyx, aventurine, titanium and Vantablack® — illustrating the increasing rarity of nature. 'It's about making the ephemeral, eternal,' Choisne told journalists. 'First we considered nature, then how it would sit on the body, rather than the other way around.' Four years and 18,000 hours in the making, Impermanence is a tribute to human ingenuity and the dizzying beauty of the natural world, that is nothing short of breathtaking. The Oat and Fieldstar necklace and earcuff from the Jewels of Nature collection by Chaumet, on show ... More at Paris Couture Week; yellow gold, white gold, white and yellow diamonds. Chaumet More than any other house on Place Vendôme, Chaumet has placed nature at the heart of its creative identity, transcribing plants and flowers into precious metals and gems with verve, for the past 245 years. In a continuation of the strikingly modern Chaumet Bamboo collection unveiled at Couture Week in February, Jewels by Nature felt more classic, with spectacular diamond pave collars, earrings and full parures full of grace and movement. A majestic full-diamond dahlia necklace of impressive volume, and a mixed metal gold and diamond earcuff stood out, and sprinkled throughout, were a series of colored gemstone rings featuring the house's beloved bee emblem, also the theme for the Bee by Chaumet high tea, available this summer at the Peninsula Hotel, in Paris. The 1963 necklace by Graff, on show at Paris Couture Week; white baguette, pavé and oval, diamonds, ... More emeralds and white gold. Graff Alongside more timeless pieces — like a triple-row pear-cut diamond choker that appeared to be lined with baguette emeralds — Graff showed a hero suite, celebrating the freedom and rebellion of Swinging London in the 1960s. The 1963 set, named for the year the house was founded, comprised a necklace, earrings and bracelet made up of a swirl of elongated hoops, traced in baguette, pavé and oval diamonds accented with round emeralds. A bangle and ring by Dries Criel on show at Paris Couture Week, gold, diamonds and tourmaline. FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™ Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase Pinpoint By Linkedin Guess The Category Queens By Linkedin Crown Each Region Crossclimb By Linkedin Unlock A Trivia Ladder Dries Criel The Antwerp-based designer is going from strength to strength, and in Paris, he showed his first high jewelry collection, marking a move into more preciousness, more colored stones — and more audacity. A natural palette ranging from woodland green to sunny yellow, in gemstones including tourmalines, diamonds, and jade, accentuates his signature forms in the Double Lotus bangle, while the endlessly elegant sphinx earrings showing paraiba tourmaline. Bold, gender-neutral jewelry, which draws on the precision of the dancer and the art of Ancient Egypt. The Rosina necklace by Pasquale Bruni, white diamonds, rubies and white gold, on show at Paris ... More Couture Week. Pasquale Bruni The Italian house chose the Musée des Arts Décoratifs for a decadent and intimate presentation of the Rosina collection, inspired by Pasquale Bruni creative director Eugenia Bruni's family history. Against the backdrop of a former family home overtaken by nature, the inspiration of a powerful matriarch — Aunt Rosina —becomes a capsule collection of diamond pave rose petals, each piece complete with a ruby heart on the inside, representing a beating heart. The Maple Colours earrings by De Beers, on show at Paris Couture Week; white, yellow and rose gold, ... More white diamonds and fancy orange diamonds. De Beers De Beers played tribute to the trees of the countries in which it mines — Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Canada — in a showcase held near the upcoming Rue de la Paix flagship, which is set to open towards the end of 2025. Diamond pavé Baobab roots encircle the neck, while the textured bark of the Namibian camelthorn tree is a reminder of resilience in bracelet form. Elsewhere, mixed metal maple leaves adorn the ear lobes, all with the house's signature mix of polished and rough stones. The Blue Chain Cascade necklace and earring from the Collezione 1967 collection by Pomellato, on ... More show at Paris Couture Week. Pomellato The Milan-based house revisited its archives with Collezione 1967, a joyful romp through three decades of jewelry history. From chain-making in the 1970s, which saw the development of the house's characteristic chunky links, through the sculptural jewels of the 1980s and bold color in the 1990s, the collection was a powerful distillation of the essence of the exuberant Milan-based jeweler, with Pomellato's signature use of colored stones providing energetic accents throughout. The Marea Rosa necklace by Damaini, inspired by pink sand and the ocean on the coast of Sardinia, ... More Paraiba tourmaline, marquise diamond and colored stones, on show at Paris Couture Week. Damiani Editors who stepped into Damiani's Place Vendôme showroom embarked on a Grand Tour of Italy for the high jewelry collection, with chapters based on the country's spectacular coastline, landscapes and cities. Muzo emeralds, a star sapphire and molto diamonds told a story of the sun-drenched splendour. Topped with an ethereal Paraiba tourmaline on a mesh of marquise-cut diamonds and morganites to convey the pink sands of Sardinia, the Marea Rosa necklace was a case in point. A model wears gold and diamond jewels by Repossi, from the Blast collecction. Repossi As the city sweltered under a heatwave, Repossi brought editors down to the cool of the lush outdoor auditorium at the Musée du Quai Branly anthropological museum, for a tour of the collections that inspire Gaia Repossi's jewelry. The most recent elements of the Blast collection draw on the curves and circles of tribal necklaces, with volume and presence recalling the designs of her father Alberto, who led the house in the 1980s and 1990s. Gold wire forms are scattered with diamonds in a sculptural play of light, that draws on elements of traditional Masai, Miao and Indonesian jewelry. The Golden Harvest Butterfly Brooch by Anna Hu, diamonds, fire opal, titanium, by Anna Hu, on show ... More at Paris Couture Week Anna Hu Anna Hu showed at home this season, in her private apartments overlooking Place Vendôme. The designer payed tribute to her other home, Monaco; with La Rose Gracieuse, a titanium, diamond and spinel brooch that recalls Princess Grace's charitable work for children through the Bal de la Rose. Elsewhere, electroplated titanium orchids bloomed next to a series of her trademark butterflies — 'hu' means butterfly in Mandarin — in a blend of Eastern inspiration and Parisian high jewelry expertise. Diamond and gemstone necklaces from the Tempest collection by Jessica McCormack, with cushion-cut ... More colored gemstone pendants, on show at Paris Couture Week. Jessica McCormack Fresh from her store opening on Madison Avenue in New York, Jessica McCormack was showing her easy-wear high jewelry in Paris. Sparkling in the summer sunlight in an airy suite at the Ritz, were ropes of round diamonds, rubies and sapphires with interchangeable button-back colored cushion-cut stones, and matching earrings topped with cornflower blue sapphires, from the upcoming Tempest collection. The spherical black bejewelled evening bag by Buccellati Buccellati The Buccellati store on rue du Faubourg St Honoré was abuzz on Tuesday morning, as the house unveiled new bejewelled evening bags. A revival of a historic line — precious bags from the 1920s and 2000s were also on show — the three models looked to Buccellati's historic craftmanship. A soft velvet pouch was finished with a satin gold frame and diamond filigree, a more structured green velvet bag was quilted and embroidered with gold and diamonds, while the most striking model, a sphere of black velvet was finished with white gold and diamond lace. Dilraba Dilmurat wears high jewelry from the Les Pétals collection by Mikimoto. Mikimoto As feminine and graceful as ever, the Japanese heritage pearl house channelled graceful flora in a high jewelry collection that sparkled in the Parisian sunshine. Colored stones and pearls evoked blooms at different times of the day, with Mikimoto's signature conch pearls appearing on statement earrings and necklaces. In parallel, the house — which also has a strong presence in the Asian beauty market — is about to launch a fragrance collaboration with Lalique, further strengthening its links with Paris. The Atlantis bracelet from the Rare Perfection collection, by David Morris, on show at Paris Couture ... More Week. David Morris The rare Perfection collection spotlit the beauty of colored stones, with unusual cherry red Mozambiquan rubies, a deep purple spinel ring and diamonds from the Argyll mine. Geometric motifs bit through hearts and gentle floral shapes, in a nod to Art Deco that made for a powerful 12-piece collection.

Boucheron's creative director Claire Choisne unveils Impermanence: 6 new multipurpose compositions aligned with the Japanese belief of wabi-sabi and themed around nature's transient beauty
Boucheron's creative director Claire Choisne unveils Impermanence: 6 new multipurpose compositions aligned with the Japanese belief of wabi-sabi and themed around nature's transient beauty

South China Morning Post

time07-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Boucheron's creative director Claire Choisne unveils Impermanence: 6 new multipurpose compositions aligned with the Japanese belief of wabi-sabi and themed around nature's transient beauty

Each year Boucheron creative director Claire Choisne is offered total freedom to push forward ideas of what high jewellery can be with the maison's Carte Blanche collection. Founded in 1858 by the enterprising Frédéric Boucheron, the maison treasures modernity and new perspectives. Its pieces can resemble art objets and are unlike anything you will see elsewhere on Paris' venerable Place Vendôme, where Boucheron remains the oldest jeweller still in operation. Boucheron Carte Blanche Impermanence No 2. Photo: Handout Advertisement Following on from January's Histoire de Style Untamed Nature collection , a nod to Frédéric Boucheron's takes on the natural world – an eternal source of inspiration – the latest chapter, Impermanence, contemplates nature on a more contemplative and more personal level. In six compositions, the collection takes inspiration from the Japanese philosophy of wabi-sabi in its acceptance of imperfection, and the Japanese art of flower arranging, ikebana, which translates as 'giving life to flowers'. In each, Choisne sought to capture the ephemeral element of nature with one-of-a-kind creations. Boucheron Carte Blanche Impermanence No 6. Photo: Handout 'In this new Carte Blanche collection, I've sought to capture the beauty of nature before it vanishes,' she says. 'These six compositions illustrate nature's fleetingness and fluidity, shifting from light to shadow to highlight how precious it is … the collection is an ode to that fragile instant that I wanted to crystallise for eternity.' Boucheron Carte Blanche Impermanence No 1. Photo: Handout The compositions, each capturing nature's idiosyncrasies – the delicacy of a tulip, the wildness of a thistle or the sense of an oak tree moving in a breeze – fuse ancient and modern techniques, some not previously realised in high jewellery. This traverses the breadth of craftsmanship, from glassmaking to plant-based resin rendered with 3D printing technology.

Style Edit: Boucheron's Untamed Nature, creative director Claire Choisne's latest Histoire de Style collection, celebrates the beauty and variety of plants and insects
Style Edit: Boucheron's Untamed Nature, creative director Claire Choisne's latest Histoire de Style collection, celebrates the beauty and variety of plants and insects

South China Morning Post

time24-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Style Edit: Boucheron's Untamed Nature, creative director Claire Choisne's latest Histoire de Style collection, celebrates the beauty and variety of plants and insects

For over a century, Boucheron has drawn inspiration from the natural world, but Untamed Nature, the maison's latest Histoire de Style collection, takes this connection to an entirely new level. Under the creative vision of Claire Choisne , the maison revisits its founder Frédéric Boucheron's deep connection to nature – not as something delicate or ornamental, but as something alive, untamed and ever-evolving. Staying true to heritage, the collection is crafted exclusively in white gold and white diamonds, just as Boucheron himself did in the late 19th century. From delicate perennials to resilient wildflowers, each floral piece in Untamed Nature carries meaning – love, loyalty and abundance expressed through shimmering botanical forms. Among the stand-out creations is the Lingonberry necklace, a masterclass in transformable design. Inspired by the hardy Arctic shrub, this intricate piece features diamond-paved leaves on a flexible structure that moulds to the body. Sections of the necklace detach to form cascading brooches, showcasing Boucheron's mastery of movement and balance. Advertisement Boucheron Airelles (Lingonberries) necklace-brooch in white gold set with pavé diamonds. Photo: Handout Capturing the lightness and fluidity of nature, the Fuchsia earrings embody the flower's delicate grace, with individually sculpted petals and articulated pistils that sway with the slightest motion, culminating in two perfectly matched two-carat diamonds. Oat Grass hair jewels offer a contemporary take on adornment, transforming into fibula brooches with spikelets that quiver as if caught in a breeze. Boucheron Fuchsia brooch in white gold set with pavé diamonds. Photo: Handout The maison's artisans also breathe new life into historic motifs, such as the Thistle necklace and brooch, homages to a 1878 design. Boucheron's jewellers use computer-aided design to replicate the thistle's spiky structure while ensuring a smooth, wearable fit. Similarly, the Cyclamen earrings feature rose-cut diamonds precisely set to follow the curve of each petal – testament to meticulous craftsmanship.

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