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Bvlgari refreshes Divas' Dream with versatile new everyday pieces

Bvlgari’s Divas’ Dream adds seven pieces that feel built for daily wear, with mother-of-pearl, pink gold and a three-way pendant giving the Roman motif real layering power.

Priya Sharma··4 min read
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Bvlgari refreshes Divas' Dream with versatile new everyday pieces
Source: trejours.com
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Bvlgari has given Divas’ Dream a useful update: seven new fine-jewelry and high-jewelry pieces that make the house motif easier to wear every day. The refresh leans on mother-of-pearl, pink gold and mosaic-inspired color combinations, then adds a three-way pendant for more ways to style the line without losing its Roman identity.

A Roman motif with real provenance

Divas’ Dream is one of Bvlgari’s clearest signatures because the design language is anchored to a specific place, not just an aesthetic mood. The collection is officially framed as a feminine line with a fan-shaped motif that pays tribute to “the world’s most phenomenal divas,” and the shape itself traces back to the fan-like mosaics of the Baths of Caracalla in Rome.

That connection matters. The Baths of Caracalla were built between AD 212 and 216, so the motif is tied to an actual architectural source rather than a generic Mediterranean flourish. Bvlgari also sponsored restoration of the mosaics in the western palaestra in 2015 and 2016, which gives the brand a direct conservation link to the design heritage it keeps returning to. Launched in 2016, Divas’ Dream has since become one of Bvlgari’s most recognizable Roman signatures.

What changed in the July refresh

The latest update is not a wholesale reinvention, and that is exactly why it works as an everyday jewelry story. The seven additions span rings, bracelets, necklaces and a layering-friendly sautoir, with mother-of-pearl taking the lead and pink gold softening the palette. Mosaic-inspired color pairings keep the line visually rich without pushing it into overt occasion territory.

The most useful new idea is the three-way pendant, which adds styling range without asking the wearer to build a whole new jewelry wardrobe around it. Pieces like that matter because they let one purchase do the work of several looks: short and neat for daytime, longer and more expressive for evening, or layered with other chains when you want more presence.

The current Divas’ Dream assortment also shows how flexible the line already is. Bvlgari’s existing range includes rose gold, yellow gold, diamonds, mother-of-pearl, malachite and other stones, which means the refresh lands inside a broader palette rather than standing alone as a one-off novelty. That breadth is what keeps the collection from feeling like a single-season idea.

Which pieces earn the strongest cost-per-wear

If you are thinking like a jewelry buyer rather than a collector assembling a display case, the ring and bracelet are the strongest cost-per-wear plays. They are the easiest to wear on repeat, the easiest to stack with existing gold bands or a watch, and the least dependent on neckline or dress code. A Divas’ Dream ring can disappear into a daily stack while still carrying the house motif, and the bracelet brings that same logic to the wrist.

The necklace is the most straightforward desk-to-dinner piece in the group. Mother-of-pearl and pink gold read polished in daylight, but they also have enough luster to hold their own in the evening, especially when the motif sits centered rather than overwhelmed by other jewelry. For anyone who wears one signature chain most days, this is the piece that can anchor a small, deliberate rotation.

The sautoir is the most visibly luxurious of the new additions, and it is also the most specific in how it wants to be worn. Long chains demand a bit more styling intention, but they reward it with movement and layering potential, especially over knitwear, a simple shirt, or a clean black dress. Bvlgari lists a mother-of-pearl sautoir at €17,500, while the mother-of-pearl necklace is priced at €9,800, a spread that makes the longer form feel more like a statement investment than an impulse buy.

The three-way pendant is the smartest utility move in the bunch. It is the kind of detail that extends a piece’s life because it changes how the jewel sits against the body and how much visual weight it carries. That is the sort of flexibility that justifies a higher-price jewelry purchase, because the piece is doing more than one job.

How the new Divas’ Dream pieces wear in real life

The refresh is strongest when it is treated as a wardrobe tool, not as a runway moment. A ring plus a bracelet gives you an easy daily uniform. Add the necklace and you have enough presence for a meeting, a dinner reservation or an event where you still want to look composed rather than overworked. Bring in the sautoir or the three-way pendant, and the line becomes more expressive without losing the restraint that makes Divas’ Dream wearable.

That balance is what separates this update from decorative jewelry churn. The Roman motif is still there, the fan shape is still legible, and the mosaic reference still gives the collection its identity. But the July additions make the line easier to live with, which is the real test for a fine-jewelry wardrobe: a piece should feel special when you put it on, then familiar enough that you reach for it again the next day.

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