Sophie Bille Brahe debuts intimate high jewelry for the brand’s 15th anniversary
Sophie Bille Brahe’s first high-jewelry collection lands at Harrods with eight wearable pieces in white gold and diamonds, priced from $100,000 to $1.4 million.

Sophie Bille Brahe’s first high-jewelry collection is aimed at the woman who wants diamonds she can actually live in, not just lock away. The debut marks the Danish jeweler’s 15th anniversary and arrives as an eight-piece line of rings, necklaces and earrings in 18-karat white gold, set with round, pear, cushion and heart-shaped diamonds. Prices start at $100,000 and rise to $1.4 million, a range that makes this less a red-carpet flex than an heirloom-level buy for an anniversary, a push present or the kind of once-in-a-decade gift that is meant to stay in the family.
The collection will launch exclusively in Harrods’ Fine Jewelry Room in late June, then travel to Sophie Bille Brahe’s Copenhagen and New York stores for curated client presentations. That rollout fits the brand’s quietly exclusive identity: it is sold at Dover Street Market and Bergdorf Goodman, and it also has its own boutiques in Copenhagen and New York. The message is clear. This is high jewelry built for intimacy, not spectacle, and it is being introduced in a setting that favors private buying over public display.

Brahe, who trained as a goldsmith and returned to Copenhagen in 2011 to establish her eponymous brand, has always worked with a stripped-back vocabulary. Her jewelry draws on Scandinavian minimalism and the beauty of diamonds and pearls, with settings pared back to let the stone do the talking. That approach matters in high jewelry, where many launches chase size, drama and visual noise. Brahe’s point of view is more disciplined, and frankly more useful for real life: the pieces are meant to sit close to the body and feel personal, not performative.

The anniversary is also a marker of how far the label has come. What began in Copenhagen has grown into a global luxury business with a foothold in some of the world’s most selective retail doors. For a buyer looking for a landmark gift, that matters almost as much as carat weight. Brahe’s high-jewelry debut offers the rare combination of status and restraint, the kind of diamond work that can be worn now and passed down later without losing its edge.
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