Anthropologie’s mixed-stone necklace drops to $18 for Memorial Day
Anthropologie’s Delicate Mixed Stone Necklace fell to $18 from $48, a polished mixed-metal layer that bridges gold and silver with ease.

Anthropologie’s Delicate Mixed Stone Necklace solved one of jewelry’s most common styling puzzles: how to wear gold and silver in the same look without making it feel accidental. Marked down to $18 from $48 during the retailer’s Memorial Day event, the gold-tone necklace landed as a small, low-risk piece with a very specific job, adding sparkle and contrast to wardrobes that already split between warm and cool metals.
The necklace’s appeal rests in its restraint. Anthropologie lists it among its gold necklaces, but the mixed-stone treatment keeps it from reading like a straightforward chain. The crystal detail gives it just enough shine to sit neatly against a white T-shirt, a button-down, or a simple slip dress, and the mixed-metal palette is exactly what makes it useful. When the stones are paired with otherwise pared-back pieces, the look reads polished and intentional. Worn with heavily embellished clothing or too many glossy accessories, it can tip closer to costume, which is the tradeoff with any necklace that leans on crystal for its effect.
That said, this is where Anthropologie’s own styling language matters. The brand frames its necklaces as pieces for layering, gifting, and everyday wear, and it explicitly encourages shoppers not to be afraid to mix gold and silver necklace tones. That direction makes the Delicate Mixed Stone Necklace feel less like a novelty buy and more like a bridge piece, the kind of chain that lets a favorite silver bracelet live comfortably beside gold hoops or a yellow-gold signet ring.

At $18, the price also changes the equation. The markdown represents roughly 62.5 percent off the regular $48 price, which makes the necklace more convincing as an everyday layering piece than as a major jewelry investment. It is not the sort of crystal necklace that needs to carry an outfit on its own; it works best as punctuation, especially for shoppers who want one accessory that can move between mixed-metal stacks without forcing a full wardrobe rule change.
Anthropologie’s reach gives the offer added weight. The brand sits within Urban Outfitters, Inc., alongside Free People, FP Movement, Urban Outfitters, and Nuuly, and the parent company has reported about $5.6 billion in sales over the past five years. In a year when mixed-metal jewelry has continued to hold fashion’s attention, this small necklace fits the moment precisely: not precious, not precious-looking, but polished enough to earn a place in an everyday rotation.
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