Luxury

Greenwich St. Jewelers and Jewel Boxing launch collectible gemstone push present charms

Greenwich St. Jewelers and Jewel Boxing turned push-present jewelry into a collectible game: 11 flower-named charms, bead strands, and pieces from $940 to $12,200.

Ava Richardson··2 min read
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Greenwich St. Jewelers and Jewel Boxing launch collectible gemstone push present charms
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Greenwich St. Jewelers and Jewel Boxing launched their fourth collaboration on June 24, 2026, and the collection makes a clear case for the modern push present: one jewel should be personal, easy to wear, and built to grow with a family story. The capsule centers on 11 flower-named gemstone charms that can move from a chain to a gemstone strand, a bracelet, or a necklace the wearer already owns, which gives the gift a lot more staying power than a single special-occasion piece.

That modular approach is what makes the drop feel right for new mothers. Greenwich St. Jewelers’ in-house bench jewelers made the 14-karat yellow gold charms in New York City, while Jennifer Gandia and Christina Gambale hand-selected the stones at the Tucson Gem Show, so some styles are one-of-a-kind and the quantities are limited. The collection also includes hand-knotted gemstone bead strands sold with charm holders, plus two 14-karat gold chains designed to work with both the charms and the beads, giving the buyer multiple ways to start a stack rather than stop at one purchase.

Pricing runs from $940 for a mixed orange opal bead strand necklace to $12,200 for the Muzo emerald Laurel frame charm, a spread that makes the line unusually flexible for gifting. The standout middle ground is strong too: the Dahlia charm is $2,100, the Quince charm is $7,900, and the Aquamarine Hydrangea frame charm is $3,700. For a push present, that range matters. A smaller charm can mark a first child without feeling precious in a fragile, museum-piece way, while a high-ticket stone like the emerald Laurel reads as a serious milestone gift.

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Source: nationaljeweler.com
Charm Prices
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The collection also shows how far this partnership has moved from its starting point. Xarissa B.’s first collaboration with Greenwich St. Jewelers arrived after her custom design experience with the brand and launched on August 22, 2024, with seven necklaces named after summer cocktails, priced from $1,800 to $4,400. Those pieces were made in the Manhattan workshop with traceable gemstones and SCS-certified recycled gold sourced at the 2024 Las Vegas Jewelry Shows. By March 2026, Greenwich St. Jewelers said Jewel Boxing had more than 40,000 followers across Instagram and TikTok, and Jennifer Gandia said many of those followers had already visited the Tribeca store after seeing Xarissa’s videos. This new drop takes that audience relationship and gives it a more lasting form: collectible color now, and room for more charms when the next family milestone arrives.

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