Buccellati debuts first silver Blossoms necklace for everyday wear
Buccellati’s first silver Blossoms necklace turns 18 gardenias and 2.90 carats of pink sapphires into a signature collar. At $3,300, it pushes a spring motif into collectible territory.

Buccellati’s Blossoms necklace turns a familiar spring flower into something more distinctive than a pretty seasonal piece. The silver collar is built from 18 gardenia motifs, each bloom centered in warm gold and set with pink sapphires totaling 2.90 carats, a mix that gives the necklace the sort of high-recognition look Buccellati is known for.
The necklace debuted in March as part of Blossoms, which Buccellati describes as its first silver jewelry line. That matters because the family-founded maison dates to 1919, and its name has long been associated with finely worked gold and high-jewelry craft rather than easy everyday silver. Here, Lucrezia Buccellati, a fourth-generation family member, brought the collection to life with a clear brief: floral jewelry that could be worn often without losing the house’s identity.

Buccellati frames Blossoms as suitable for everyday wear, and the necklace is the strongest argument for that idea. The petals are finely engraved and subtly irregular, so the flowers read as sculptural rather than sugary. Instead of stacking several chains into the neck-collage look that has filled recent jewelry feeds, Buccellati chose one concentrated statement piece, letting texture do the work. The result feels polished and deliberate, with enough softness to read feminine and enough structure to keep it from drifting into costume territory.

At $3,300 in the United States, the Blossoms necklace is not an entry-level silver buy, and it is not trying to be. The price reflects the combination of sterling silver, gemstone weight, and the labor that gives Buccellati pieces their surface detail. In a market crowded with floral motifs, this one stands out because it does not merely borrow the language of spring. It translates it into a house code, one that connects a century-old Milanese heritage to a modern, wearable collar with clear Buccellati DNA.
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