Swarovski launches fruit and insect-themed Summertime capsule with Ariana Grande
Ariana Grande fronts Swarovski’s fruit-and-insect Summertime capsule, a candy-colored range of clover charms, bee motifs and multicolor rings priced from about $21.

Ariana Grande’s latest Swarovski turn arrives with a playful premise that feels tuned for summer: strawberries, watermelons, bees and clovers rendered in high-gloss crystal, with the Summertime capsule stretching from about $21 to $550. The range, which is available online now, includes charms, rings, earrings and necklaces designed to read less like novelty and more like a bright, wearable reset for warm-weather dressing.
The clearest everyday pieces are the ones that keep the whimsy concentrated. A $79 clover charm gives the motif a small, modular entry point, while the $249 drop earrings offer more polish without tipping into costume territory. The $550 multicolored ring is the most dramatic gesture in the group, the kind of piece that wants a bare hand and a simple manicure to let the color do the talking. That tiering matters: Swarovski is not asking this capsule to live only on a mood board, but to move between denim, linen and occasion dressing.
Grande is the face of the collection and has been a Swarovski global ambassador since 2024, a role that now folds neatly into her own pop calendar. Her album Petal is set for release on July 31, 2026, which makes the brand’s fruit-forward naming and garden imagery feel especially well timed. Swarovski describes the campaign as a “more-is-more” summer statement, built around juicy fruits and candy color combinations, a shift from the earlier floral-leaning approach while keeping the nature theme intact.
There is also a broader commercial logic at work. Swarovski’s Ariana Grande x Swarovski page shows 46 results in the collaboration, with pieces ranging from $119 to $550, suggesting that Summertime is not a one-off but part of a larger celebrity-driven universe. Grande co-created the line with Swarovski global creative director Giovanna Engelbert, and the brand’s 1895 Austrian heritage gives the whole exercise a polished legacy backdrop. In a market where kidcore references and whimsical jewelry have moved well beyond social media, Swarovski is making a clear case that a fruit charm or crystal insect can be as current as any logo necklace, only lighter, brighter and easier to wear now.
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