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Cannes Film Festival 2025: The best jewellery on the red carpet
Cannes Film Festival 2025: The best jewellery on the red carpet

Vogue Singapore

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue Singapore

Cannes Film Festival 2025: The best jewellery on the red carpet

The Cannes Film Festival, held in the French Riviera, is the most prestigious film festival in the world. Which, unsurprisingly, makes it prime viewing for new films—sure—but also the stars and celebrities in the orbit of cinema. The 2025 edition of Cannes is proving just as glamorous on the jewellery front, one area of styling that's perhaps least affected by a newly instituted ban on naked dressing on the red carpet. Some of the most spectacular, standout jewels are, unsurprisingly, creations by Chopard, which has been an official partner of the Cannes Film Festival since 1998. French actress Pom Klementieff had on a pair of incredible Chopard haute joaillerie pink kunzite briolette earrings to the première of Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning . At the red carpet for Wes Anderson's The Phoenician Scheme , Eva Longoria with 479 carats of kunzite briolettes on her neck courtesy of a design from Chopard's (aptly named) Red Carpet collection, and model Alex Consani wearing over 21 carats of the house's new Insofu emeralds. And, of course, brand ambassador Bella Hadid—always one to watch at Cannes—drew eyes on the festival's opening night in a pair of positively massive earrings set with a pair of emeralds weighing 118.68 carats in total. Some other standout jewellers and maisons on the red carpet so far: Boucheron, which is finding fabulous occasion for a number of its Untamed Nature high jewellery pieces, and which seems to have lit up Cannes with its fabulous Question Mark necklaces. Pomellato, meanwhile, previewed some pieces from its upcoming new high jewellery line, set to debut in June in Milan, on brand ambassador Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu. Here, a look at the sparkling, standout jewels so far on the 2025 Cannes Film Festival red carpets. Getty 1 / 18 Bella Hadid Wearing Chopard high jewellery. Getty 2 / 18 Kim Go-eun Wearing Chanel Comète earring. Getty 3 / 18 Mina Wearing Boucheron Rosier earrings and Question Mark necklace from the Histoire de Style, Untamed Nature high jewellery collection. Getty 4 / 18 Zhou Ye Wearing Tasaki Harmonie necklace from the Nouvelle ère high jewellery collection, and earrings. Getty 5 / 18 Gao Yuanyuan Wearing Chaumet Joséphine Valse Impériale high jewellery necklace. Getty 6 / 18 Alexa Chung Wearing Boucheron Serpent Bohème Vintage earrings, ring and bracelet, and archival bangle. Getty 7 / 18 Pom Klementieff Wearing Chopard high jewellery. Getty 8 / 18 Julianne Moore Wearing Boucheron Goutte de Cristal high jewellery earrings. Getty 9 / 18 Natalie Portman Wearing Tiffany & Co. high jewellery earrings and necklace from the 2025 Blue Book Collection. Getty 10 / 18 Eva Longoria Wearing Chopard high jewellery. Getty 11 / 18 Alessandra Ambrosio Wearing Pomellato Fortezza high jewellery earrings and necklace. Getty 12 / 18 Araya Hargate Araya Hargate wearing Boucheron Airelles necklace from the Histoire de Style, Untamed Nature high jewellery collection; and Lierre de Paris earrings. Getty 13 / 18 Rihanna Wearing Boucheron Rosier earrings from the Histoire de Style, Untamed Nature high jewellery collection. Getty 14 / 18 Araya Hargate Wearing Boucheron Plume de Paon Question Mark necklace and earrings. Getty 15 / 18 Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Wearing Tiffany & Co. high jewellery earrings and necklace from the 2024 Blue Book Collection. Getty 16 / 18 Amal Clooney Wearing Caresse d'orchidées par Cartier earrings from the Cartier Collection and Cartier Libre Polymorph ring. Getty 17 / 18 Veena Praveenar Singh Wearing La Marquise jewellery. Getty 18 / 18 Leila Slimani Wearing Cartier Collection Honeymoon earrings and necklace.

Boucheron Plays With Bugs
Boucheron Plays With Bugs

New York Times

time26-01-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Boucheron Plays With Bugs

Creepy crawlies never looked so good. In its latest high jewelry outing, titled Untamed Nature, Boucheron has focused on an approach to reinterpreting flora and fauna that began with its founder, Frédéric Boucheron — and the result is strikingly true to life. The 28-piece collection is part of Histoire de Style, a continuing series inspired by Boucheron's archives that the brand presents annually during the Paris haute couture shows in January. Having previously chosen such themes as couture and a reinterpretation of a pair of diamond and aquamarine brooches owned by Queen Elizabeth II, Boucheron's creative director, Claire Choisne, said her dream this time was to 'erase jewelry entirely.' 'I wanted to move away from grandeur and get down to nature in its most humble aspects,' Ms. Choisne said. Working solely with white gold and white diamonds, as Boucheron himself did in the late 19th century, she expanded the house's symbolic herbarium with designs of perennials, weeds, spikelets and reeds, all botanical metaphors for qualities such as love, loyalty, abundance and resilience. Other high jewelry presentations this season have similar themes. Bamboo, an emblem of flexibility, renewal and longevity, was chosen as the name of Chaumet's new collection, to be unveiled in the brand's gilded salons on Place Vendôme this week. And as part of the third installment of Cartier's Nature Sauvage collection, to be presented at the Ritz Paris, the house is showcasing jewels that Zoe Saldaña wore this month when she won the best supporting actress award at the Golden Globes for 'Emilia Pérez.' Called Melis, the Greek word for honey, a parure of earrings and a necklace reprises the house's honeycomb motif; the necklace is set with a honeybee whose body is a briolette-cut 2.64-carat fancy intense yellow diamond. (Other presentations, however, have taken different paths. Dior's new collection focuses on lace-and-floral themes, while the geometry of 18th-century French gardens inspired Elie Top's Les Liaisons Dangereuses collection, celebrating the 10th anniversary of his brand, presented at Christie's Paris.) At Boucheron, pieces inspired by late 19th- and early 20th-century archival designs were revisited to lifelike scale and made using a combination of traditional techniques and new technology to heighten the impression of realism. They include a prickly thistle-leaf necklace and brooch, a hair jewel shaped like a sprig of oat grass and an intricately articulated lingonberry body jewel that can be worn as a necklace or, more daringly, over the shoulder. Some of the jewel's branches also can be detached and worn as brooches. Reprising the house's iconic question mark necklace, invented in 1879, a rose bush — minus the blooms — features three pavé leaves and is anchored by a pear-cut diamond weighing slightly more than six carats, surrounded by baguette and round diamonds. The primary gem can be detached and mounted into a ring, and replaced on the necklace with another droplet in rock crystal and diamonds. A large brooch-slash-hair jewel shaped like a carrot flower, also called Queen Anne's lace, is the sole piece not based on archival references. But Ms. Choisne really seemed to let loose with bugs, which she has rendered true to nature, and also larger than life. Already part of Boucheron's repertoire — the actor Andrew Scott wore a trio of bees from 1948 to the 2024 Met Gala — the new bumblebee is a larger-than-life version with stripes of diamonds and onyx, and translucent wings carved from mother-of-pearl and overlaid by laser-engraved rock crystal edged in black lacquer. On its belly, a runner mechanism makes it possible to transform the piece from a brooch into a two-finger ring. In the same vein, a simple mechanism allows an imposing rhinoceros beetle with lifelike wings that can move to be changed from a brooch to a two-finger ring that spans all four fingers. And with a pinch of its mandibles, a stag beetle fully pavéd in diamonds morphs from a brooch to an imposing knuckle duster. There is also a trio of winged creatures — a honeybee ear clip, a housefly brooch and a ladybug with spread wings — on offer as a set. It is the unpretentious moth, however, that looks the most realistic. A body composed of baguette diamonds is flanked by four wings carved from mother-of-pearl, with hand-engraved veining, black lacquer accents and diamond edging. Describing its velvety finish, Ms. Choisne said, 'It's always a question of how to take the archives and go even further.'

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