Dukachi turns golf culture into a limited-edition gold pendant
Dukachi's 59-piece golf pendant pairs a diamond-studded club with a wheat-ear shaft, turning golf into Ukrainian-coded gold.

A golf club in gold should not feel inevitable, yet Dukachi makes it read as both jewel and insignia. The Kyiv-based brand has recast a familiar leisure symbol as a limited-edition pendant: a gold club motif cradling a diamond-studded ball, with the shaft shaped like a wheat ear, a detail that gives the piece its Ukrainian accent and keeps it from sliding into novelty.
The construction is more considered than the idea first suggests. Dukachi makes the pendant in 14K yellow and white gold, sets it with 57 natural or lab-grown diamonds totaling about 0.3 carat, and keeps the jewelry weight at 4 grams. It is priced at €1,350, made to order in about three to four weeks, handcrafted at the brand’s own production facility in Kyiv, and hallmarked at the state assay office in Ukraine. Shipping excludes Russia and Belarus, a routing choice that underscores how clearly the brand understands the politics of where its jewelry comes from and where it will not go.
That matters because this is not a gem-heavy showpiece trying to compete on carat weight alone. Its appeal lies in the specificity of the object itself. Dukachi describes its practice as “Cultural Interpretation,” and this pendant is a clean example of that concept at work: golf is not simply referenced, it is rewritten through a wheat-ear grip that the brand describes as a subtle tribute to natural heritage. The result is a piece for someone who wants gold jewelry to say something beyond taste alone.

The edition cap of 59 pieces is the sharpest detail in the design, and the smartest. In golf, 59 is a number that carries mythic charge, because PGA Tour history has produced only 15 sub-60 rounds, 14 of them 59s and one 58. Jim Furyk’s 58 at the 2016 Travelers Championship remains the lowest recorded score on the tour, which gives the pendant’s limited run a quiet competitive logic. Even more telling, the Ukrainian Golf Federation has already given the design a place in the sport’s language, with two pendants set to be used as competitive awards in the upcoming season.
That is where Dukachi’s pendant becomes more than a charm. It works as a wearable conversation piece for golfers, collectors and anyone drawn to gold jewelry that carries identity in its structure, not just in its label. The club is the hook; the wheat ear is the message.
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