Design

Dukachi unveils limited-edition golf pendant honoring Ukrainian symbolisms

Dukachi turned golf’s Club 59 benchmark into a 59-piece pendant, with the natural-stone version priced at $1,981.

Priya Sharma··2 min read
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Dukachi unveils limited-edition golf pendant honoring Ukrainian symbolisms
Source: jckonline.com

Dukachi has taken one of golf’s rarest bragging rights and turned it into a piece of fine jewelry that reads as much as personal emblem as sports souvenir. The Kyiv-based house’s new pendant ties the “Club 59” milestone, the feat of shooting below 60 on an 18-hole championship course, to an 18K-looking mix of 14K yellow and white gold, 57 diamonds, and a compact chain that sits close to the neck.

The edition is tightly controlled: Dukachi is making only 59 pendants, a number that gives the piece its own built-in mythology. The natural-stone version is priced at $1,981, while the lab-grown version is listed at $1,565, putting it in a lane where the buyer is getting actual precious metal, diamond weight, and a clear story without crossing the price line that pushes many giftable pendants out of reach.

The design’s strongest move is not the golf club itself but the shaft, which Dukachi shaped like an ear of wheat. Anna and Yelyzaveta Knyzhenko describe the motif as a sacred Ukrainian symbol tied to fertility, abundance, home, and unity, which gives the pendant a cultural register that goes well beyond sports styling. In a category crowded with logo-driven athletic trinkets, that kind of symbolism makes the piece feel wearable in ordinary life, not only at the 19th hole.

Dukachi says the pendant contains 57 natural or lab-grown diamonds totaling about 0.3 carats, weighs roughly 4 grams, and measures 36 to 38 cm in length. It is made to order in Kyiv within three to four weeks, a detail that matters for buyers who care as much about provenance and production as they do about design. The brand says all jewelry is made in its own production facility in Kyiv, and it operates company-owned boutiques in Kyiv and Lviv.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The release also fits Dukachi’s larger identity. Founded in 2018 by the Knyzhenko sisters, the brand has built its concept around “Cultural Interpretation,” reworking Ukrainian symbols into luxury jewelry rather than chasing generic trends. It was included in Forbes Next 250 in 2025, and it has already worked with the Ukrainian rhythmic gymnastics team, whose federation sought to collaborate exclusively with Ukrainian brands as a gesture of national pride and solidarity.

That same logic now extends to golf. The Ukrainian Golf Federation has recognized the pendant and will give two of them as competitive awards in the upcoming season, turning a limited-edition jewel into an object with both ceremonial and sporting weight. For a sub-$2,000 pendant, that combination of national symbolism, controlled scarcity, and daily wearability is what gives it staying power beyond the course.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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