Kinn Studio and Prince Tennis launch polished Grand Slam jewelry collaboration
Kinn Studio and Prince Tennis turned Grand Slam season into a rolling jewelry story, led by a $960 chain earring and an $8,520 diamond necklace.

Kinn Studio and Prince Tennis turned Grand Slam season into a rolling jewelry story, with Match One landing alongside the French Open and more drops set for Wimbledon and the U.S. Open. Kinn framed the pairing as “two brands holding the same standard for decades, in entirely different worlds” that “just needed the right moment,” and the first capsule translates tennis into something sleeker than souvenir merch: shield motifs, chain-link details and pavé settings that read polished on court and even better off it.
The first pieces make clear that Kinn is aiming squarely at fine jewelry, not novelty branding. The Doubles Diamond Chain Earring is priced at $960, while the Naomi Graduated Tennis Necklace sits at $8,520, putting the collection firmly in luxury territory. Kinn says the jewelry range runs from $960 to $8,520 and uses 14k solid gold, recycled 14k gold and lab diamonds. The Naomi necklace, which carries about 5 carats of round diamonds in a graduated setting, was inspired by the silhouette of Kinn’s bestselling Madison Tennis Bracelet. That connection gives the piece the crisp, linear sparkle of classic tennis jewelry, but with enough structure to feel current.
Jennie Yoon said the collaboration was about moving beyond a traditional tennis campaign and blending performance precision with ease, so the pieces reflect how tennis becomes part of everyday life on and off court. Kinn says the line was designed and created in Los Angeles and will extend beyond jewelry into apparel and accessories, a move that gives the partnership a wider life than a one-off logo drop. The timing is the point. Tennis has a built-in style language, from clean whites to strong, athletic silhouettes, and it returns every season with a visible calendar beat. That makes it a sharper commercial lane than generic quiet-luxury advice, which tends to flatten style into sameness.

Prince has its own reason to lean in. Matthew Salter, executive vice president of partnership-marketing at Authentic Brands Group, said the brand is looking for partners who can reinterpret Prince in a way that feels authentic and culturally relevant. Authentic Brands says its portfolio includes more than 50 brands and a network of 1,700 partners worldwide, scale that helps turn a heritage sports name into a lifestyle proposition. The next installments arrive on June 11 for Wimbledon and Aug. 18 for the U.S. Open, keeping Kinn x Prince in step with the sport’s biggest stages and giving tennis-coded jewelry a repeat spotlight most fashion capsules never get.
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