Sorellina's Bloom Collection Brings Flower-Power Gemstone Inlays to Spring 2026
Sorellina's Bloom pendant assembles eight gemstone petals, from chrysoprase to purple jade, in 18-karat gold for $21,000.

Sorellina arrived at spring 2026 with a collection that treats the flower not as ornament but as architecture. The "Bloom" collection, debuted this week, draws its DNA from the flower power movement of the 1960s and '70s, reinterpreting that era's motifs of individuality and expression through precision gemstone inlay rather than enamel or printed textile.
The hero piece is the Large Bloom Inlay Pendant, and it makes the collection's ambition immediately legible. Each pendant is set with one "petal" of each of eight distinct gemstones: purple jade, malachite, tiger's eye, blue lace agate, chrysoprase, pink opal, turquoise, and yellow opal. Diamond accents punctuate the composition in 18-karat yellow gold. The price is $21,000, which positions the piece squarely in the collector tier, where the technical discipline of inlay work, and the challenge of sourcing eight harmonious stones in consistent quality, begins to justify the number.
Those eight stones are not incidental. They map directly to the collection's eight colorways, a structure that gives the Bloom line its coherence across multiple silhouettes. The Bloom Inlay Crescent Earrings are available in each of the eight gemstone colorways, allowing a collector to build around a single stone or assemble the full spectrum. The collection also includes the Bloom and Bloom Inlay Pendants, the Petal Ring, and Bloom Studs, though pricing and full material specifications for those pieces were not released at launch.
The gemstone selection itself deserves a closer read. Chrysoprase, a nickel-bearing chalcedony, brings a saturated apple green that registers very differently from the cooler blue-green of turquoise; placing them in the same floral structure forces a conversation between two stones that share a color family but not a temperament. Blue lace agate, with its translucent banded character, sits alongside the opacity of malachite's concentric rings. The pairing of pink opal and yellow opal introduces a softness that counterbalances the stronger graphic presence of tiger's eye. The design intelligence here is in the tension between those materials, not merely their variety.

Describing the collection as "vintage-inspired yet modern" is accurate but undersells the specificity of the craft involved. Inlay at this level requires each stone to be cut and fitted so that the surface sits flush, with no raised edges to catch light at the wrong angle or accumulate wear. In 18-karat yellow gold, which is a slightly warmer and more saturated alloy than 14-karat, the warm metal ground amplifies the saturated tones of stones like malachite and chrysoprase without competing with the more restrained palette of blue lace agate.
For a brand working in the space between fine jewelry and wearable art, the Bloom collection reads as a deliberate statement about what gemstone variety can accomplish when it is organized around a clear visual idea rather than deployed for sheer abundance.
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