Louis Vuitton adds 28 Color Blossom jewelry pieces for monogram anniversary
Louis Vuitton added 28 Color Blossom pieces for Monogram’s 130th year, including rare sodalite styles that stack easily.

Louis Vuitton has given Color Blossom a quieter kind of luxury update: 28 new fine-jewelry pieces tied to the Monogram canvas’s 130th anniversary, with sodalite, new pavé details and the kind of proportions that invite stacking instead of announcement. The current pieces include a single earstud at $2,210, a bracelet at $3,150, a pendant at $3,300, a ring at $3,550 and a long necklace at $41,500, which puts the line squarely in milestone-gift territory from entry-level luxury to full-on splurge.
Color Blossom first appeared in 2015, and the motif underneath it is older by design. The Monogram was created in 1896 by Georges Vuitton as a tribute to Louis Vuitton, and this anniversary year also extends into Monogram Origine, VVN, Time Trunk and LVxTM, so the house is using the moment to move a signature pattern beyond leather goods and deeper into jewelry.
That matters for gifting because Color Blossom now reads less like engraved jewelry and more like a personal uniform. Ana de Armas and Ouyang Nana front the campaign, which fits a collection built around clean Monogram Flowers, a rare navy-blue sodalite palette and a more contemporary, wearable stance. The best buy for a younger graduate or a first serious jewelry gift is the $2,210 earstud; the $3,150 bracelet and $3,550 ring feel right for anniversaries, promotions or birthdays when the goal is something symbolic that still wears every day.
The real appeal is that the line lets the Monogram feel coded rather than loud. Louis Vuitton already offers signature gift wrapping and personalization services, but Color Blossom is the subtler route: a piece with heritage cues, enough color to feel specific to the wearer and enough restraint to live with jeans, a blazer or a second ring. In a year when the house is celebrating the Monogram across handbags and jewelry alike, this is the version that most clearly shows where luxury gifting is headed, less monogram-as-badge, more monogram-as-private symbol.
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