Jessica McCormack Debuts 36-Piece Orbit High-Jewelry Collection in London
Jessica McCormack's 36-piece Orbit collection reimagines her Ball-n-Chain signature through a celestial lens, anchored by Georgian cut-down settings and 18k gold inspired by 19th-century astronomy.

Jessica McCormack drew from the 19th century's golden age of astronomy to shape Orbit, a 36-piece high-jewelry collection that launched March 12 in London and represents the most conceptually ambitious expansion of her Ball-n-Chain design language to date.
"Orbit is about gravity. The pieces are designed to sit within the wearer's orbit, drawn naturally to them, rather than demanding attention," McCormack said. That philosophy shapes every category in the collection: rings, earrings, bracelets, necklaces, and pendants, each conceived to complement the wearer rather than overwhelm. The brand describes the underlying idea as cosmic balance and the harmony of spheres, a framework that asks jewelry to behave less like an exclamation point and more like a gravitational field.
For McCormack, whose New Zealand origins and London base inform a practice built on antique craftsmanship, the celestial reference point is characteristically precise. Georgian cut-down settings, which cradle stones within a low, metal-rimmed collar that originated in 18th-century goldsmithing, appear throughout Orbit alongside the blackened gold that has long defined her aesthetic. The technique creates a visual weight that grounds the collection's more expansive astronomical ambitions, keeping the pieces tethered to something tactile and historical even as their motifs reach toward the stars.
The standout object in the collection is a brooch described as reminiscent of a Victorian compass rose, its 18-karat yellow gold spires and sunbeams radiating outward with the kind of graphic authority that reads well both as a standalone statement and as an anchor in a layered look. Orbit also includes a selection of diamond arm bands, a category that Marion Fasel, founder of The Adventurine, singled out as a trending silhouette in episode two of her "My Next Question" podcast. One ring in the collection centers on a 3.43-carat sapphire accompanied by 1.47 carats of additional stones, a composition that suggests the sapphire-as-celestial-body logic McCormack wove through the collection's concept.

That layering logic is, in fact, central to how the brand intends Orbit to function in a wardrobe. Each piece is designed to pair seamlessly with existing Jessica McCormack designs, building what the brand calls a "constellation tailored to the wearer." It is a commercial argument as much as an aesthetic one: a client who already owns Ball-n-Chain pieces has an immediate entry point into Orbit without abandoning what she already wears. The collection expands a vocabulary rather than replacing it.
Orbit is available now on the Jessica McCormack website. With 36 pieces spanning five jewelry categories and a material palette that runs from 18-karat yellow gold to blackened settings, it gives collectors substantial room to compose their own arrangements, one orbit at a time.
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