Design

Sylvie Jewelry unveils Encore bridal collection, inspired by Levine’s ring

Sylvie Jewelry’s Encore turns Levine’s private engagement ring into a retail-ready bridal strategy, pairing bezel and east-west details with Custom Atelier for authorized stores.

Rachel Levy··2 min read
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Sylvie Jewelry unveils Encore bridal collection, inspired by Levine’s ring
Source: nationaljeweler.com
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Sylvie Jewelry is betting that the most compelling new bridal story is not a brand-new silhouette, but a founder’s own ring, translated into a scalable sales tool. The company debuted its Encore collection at JCK in Las Vegas last month, then paired it with Custom Atelier, a digital custom-design tool for authorized retailers built to help stores move bespoke engagement rings with more ease and a more elevated pitch.

That strategy is smartly calibrated for 2026. Encore leans into details already resonating in the bridal market: half-bezel and bezel-set emerald cuts, east-west baguette accents, and a five-stone radiant design rendered in 18-karat yellow gold and platinum. Sylvie says the line is meant to feel more luxury and to present the designer’s previously private design language to customers for the first time, which gives retailers something safer than a wholly new form and more distinctive than a generic round-solitaire update.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

At the center of the collection is Sylvie Levine’s own engagement ring, the source of the line’s name and point of view. Levine, who was born and raised in Antwerp, Belgium, said the rings grew out of the confidence she felt designing her own ring with her husband, and that she wanted other women to feel that same power. The most literal translation is the Sylvie ring itself, described as a mirror image of Levine’s personal engagement ring, with an emerald-cut center stone in a bezel setting and 0.92 carats of thin baguettes in half bezels down an 18-karat yellow gold band, priced at $11,640 before the center stone.

The rest of the assortment keeps the same disciplined language. Zaila features a half-bezel-set emerald-cut diamond with channel-set graduating baguettes totaling 1.06 carats, priced at $10,965 before the center stone. Briella moves the baguette accents east-west around an emerald-cut center stone, with 0.52 carats priced at $7,285 before the center stone. Josie takes the collection furthest into statement territory, with a five-stone setting and 1.40 carats of radiant-cut side stones in 18-karat yellow gold, priced at $12,255.

That pricing and styling place Encore in a more confident tier than Sylvie’s broader bridal offering, but still within a retail strategy built on customization rather than one-off spectacle. Sylvie and Ian Levine founded the brand in 2007 as an extension of Spectrum Diamonds, a business rooted in the family’s diamond trade and built on roughly 30 years of diamond expertise. With previous collections including Tulira, Solaz, Linéaire, and Shell Iconelle, Sylvie has been widening its bridal vocabulary for years. Encore reads as the clearest expression yet of that evolution: a private ring, sharpened into a commercial language retailers can actually sell.

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