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Meghan Markle wears Logan Hollowell gold necklace with family symbolism in Geneva

Meghan Markle’s Geneva appearance put a Logan Hollowell emerald-and-diamond necklace in the spotlight, turning yellow gold into a family-coded statement.

Priya Sharma··2 min read
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Meghan Markle wears Logan Hollowell gold necklace with family symbolism in Geneva
AI-generated illustration

Meghan Markle turned a yellow-gold necklace into the center of her Geneva appearance, pairing it with her Cartier Love bracelet and Princess Diana’s Cartier Tank watch. The look was polished, but the message was intimate: the stones were read as a nod to Archie and Prince Harry, giving the piece the kind of hidden-tribute meaning that has become more visible in fine jewelry.

She wore the necklace on May 17, 2026, in Geneva, Switzerland, when she joined the unveiling of The Lost Screen Memorial at Place des Nations ahead of the 79th World Health Assembly. The World Health Organization said the memorial was created with Archewell Philanthropies and The Parents’ Network to draw attention to the health impacts of online violence affecting children and adolescents. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also framed the names at the memorial as individual children and families, not numbers, which sharpened the emotional register of the event and made Meghan’s jewelry choice feel especially pointed.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The necklace appears to be Logan Hollowell’s Lovers Duet Diamond and Emerald Chain Necklace, a piece built around an approximately 1.30-carat oval emerald and an approximately 0.90-carat asscher-cut diamond on a diamond-cut link chain. Logan Hollowell describes the emerald as symbolizing growth, love and renewal, while the diamond stands for symmetry and strength. At about $21,150, it sits squarely in luxury territory, but its appeal is not only the carat weight. The construction, with its refined link chain and two-stone balance, makes it a natural fit for a wearer who wants sentiment without slipping into overt initials or literal charms.

That is where the trend gets interesting. Meghan has used Logan Hollowell jewelry this way before, including an emerald necklace in New York in January 2024 that was widely read as a tribute to Archie’s birthstone. The through line is clear: sentimental fine jewelry is moving toward subtler codes, from birthstone accents to symbolic stones and pendants that layer easily with watches and bracelets already rich in meaning. The best pieces now suggest a private story rather than spelling it out.

For readers trying to echo the look, the formula is less about copying Meghan’s exact necklace than about the balance she struck in Geneva: yellow gold, one or two meaningful stones, and enough restraint to let the symbolism stay tucked beneath the surface.

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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