Louis Vuitton debuts Color Blossom jewelry watches for Monogram Flower anniversary
Louis Vuitton turns its Monogram Flower into a 26mm jewelry watch, with four versions arriving in boutiques June 12 and a campaign fronted by Ana de Armas.

Louis Vuitton is pushing the Color Blossom motif into new territory with a jewelry watch that behaves like a bracelet, a timepiece and a house signature all at once. The four new models are the brand’s first watch in its fine-jewelry lines, and they land in boutiques on June 12, 2026, just as Louis Vuitton marks 130 years since Georges Vuitton created the Monogram Flower in 1896.
That anniversary gives the release real gifting weight. Color Blossom already has the familiarity of an established jewelry line, launched in 2015 as a tribute to the motif, and it now spans rings, pendants, bracelets and earrings in seven stone combinations, with sodalite added in March 2026. The new watches make the symbol more literal and more useful: they keep the recognizable flower shape, but they also tell time, which is exactly the kind of doubling that makes a present feel considered rather than merely expensive.
The cases are 26mm and shaped like the Monogram Flower, with a profile Louis Vuitton describes as a round pebble. A flower-shaped crown keeps the line obvious from every angle, while the hands carry a tiny nail motif that references the house’s trunkmaking roots. The curved sapphire crystal follows the rounded quatrefoil outline, so the whole piece reads as jewelry first and watch second, a smart choice for a buyer deciding between a classic bracelet and a conventional dress watch.
Louis Vuitton is offering four versions: steel with a white mother-of-pearl dial, pink gold with pale pink mother-of-pearl, amazonite with yellow gold, and a rose-gold model with a mother-of-pearl dial set with more than 100 white diamonds totaling just under a carat. The gemstone dials were the technical feat here. Louis Vuitton says the mineral and organic slices were only 0.3 to 0.6 millimeters thick, which meant the stamping process had to be calibrated precisely to avoid breakage. The pale pink mother-of-pearl dial was hand-painted on the reverse to achieve its blush tone, and each dial was hand-polished at La Fabrique des Arts, part of La Fabrique du Temps Louis Vuitton.
The campaign will go global on May 29, 2026, with house ambassador Ana de Armas fronting imagery shot by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin. That positioning tells the story clearly: these are not just decorative watches, but an answer for the recipient whose style sits between fine jewelry and horology, and for the moment that calls for both permanence and polish.
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