Kinn Studio and Prince Tennis launch Grand Slam-inspired jewelry collection
Kinn Studio and Prince Tennis turned Grand Slam season into a fine-jewelry gift drop, with prices from $960 to $8,520 and releases tied to Roland-Garros, Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.

Kinn Studio and Prince Tennis have turned Grand Slam season into a surprisingly polished gift moment: a fine-jewelry and apparel collaboration that is rolling out in three timed drops, with the French Open capsule available now, Wimbledon set for June 11, and the U.S. Open arriving Aug. 18. The price range, from $960 to $8,520, puts the collection squarely in special-occasion territory, but the best pieces read as jewelry first and tennis reference second.
That is the smart part. Instead of leaning on obvious racquet or ball motifs, the collection uses shield shapes, chain-link elements, graduated stones and refined settings. The French Open capsule nods to Roland-Garros through red-clay inspiration, with pavé details and rounded forms that feel closer to modern fine jewelry than fan merchandise. Wimbledon will bring emerald accents, while the U.S. Open will shift toward diamond-focused silhouettes. For a gift, that means you can choose the subtext that fits the person: subtle court energy for someone who loves tennis, or a clean, elevated piece for someone who simply wants beautiful jewelry with a story attached.

Kinn’s side of the partnership gives the collection credibility beyond the sport calendar. Jennie Yoon founded Kinn Studio in 2017 after her family’s heirloom jewelry was stolen in a 2015 robbery, and the brand has built its identity around solid 14k gold and sterling silver pieces designed in Los Angeles to be worn every day and handed down. Its first permanent New York City storefront opened in February 2026 at 373 Bleecker Street in the West Village, a brick-and-mortar move that makes the label feel less like a startup and more like a serious jewelry house with staying power.
Prince brings the heritage. The brand says it has been elevating the game on and off the court since 1970, giving it more than fifty years in racquet sports. Authentic Brands Group acquired the Prince name in 2012, and the company has continued using collaborations to extend the label beyond equipment and into fashion and lifestyle. Matthew Salter said Kinn brought a refined point of view that blended tennis heritage, sophistication, modern design and craftsmanship, and that is exactly why this drop works.

For gift buyers, the appeal is simple: this is a luxury sports collaboration with a real calendar, clear scarcity, and enough restraint to feel elegant after the tournament banners come down.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

