Sylvie debuts Encore bridal collection in 18-karat gold and platinum
Sylvie’s Encore takes the brand’s bridal language into 18-karat yellow gold and platinum, with a mirror-image ring drawn from Sylvie Levine’s own engagement design.

Sylvie has turned its founder’s private engagement ring into a public bridal signal. The Encore collection, which debuted at JCK 2026 in Las Vegas, is built exclusively in 18-karat yellow gold and platinum and leans into a more sculptural, more expressive version of bridal jewelry, with bolder diamonds, richer metals and silhouettes that read as heirloom-minded rather than basic.
The most telling piece is the Sylvie ring itself, a mirror image of Sylvie Levine’s personal engagement ring. On the line sheet, the design is listed with 0.92 carats of thin baguettes set in half bezels down the band, a detail that changes the feel entirely: the stones sit low and sleek, and the bezel work gives the setting a polished, architectural edge. It is priced at $5,210 without the center stone on the line sheet, while National Jeweler reported the same Sylvie ring at $11,640, also excluding the center stone, underscoring how quickly this kind of bridal design can move into luxury territory.

Encore’s broader range stretches from more accessible entries to higher-ticket statement rings, with styles including Zaila at $10,965, Briella at $7,285 and Josie at $12,255. Several numbered settings, including S3655S at $5,545, S3651S at $2,600, S3652S at $2,170, S3654S at $2,405, S3658 at $4,985, S3644 at $4,305, S3653S at $5,570 and S3642S at $2,405, show a collection designed to cover a wide range of bridal budgets while still signaling a more finished point of view. This is not a plain solitaire story; it is a case for yellow gold and platinum working in tandem with refined proportions and sentimental provenance.

That provenance matters. Sylvie Levine, who was born and raised in Antwerp, Belgium, says this is the first time she has shared her private design language publicly. The brand was founded with Ian Levine and draws on 30 years of diamond expertise through Spectrum Diamonds, a background that helps explain why the collection feels calibrated for shoppers looking beyond generic bridal basics. Sylvie, which was founded in 2007 and long specialized in wedding rings for women, has been widening its scope, and Encore makes that shift visible in one of the category’s most commercially important corners.

The move also arrives alongside Custom Atelier, the retailer-facing tool Sylvie introduced at JCK and a consumer version of which is planned for later in 2026 on SylvieJewelry.com. Sylvie says its custom engagement ring process includes a 150-point quality control phase, a detail that reinforces the brand’s pitch: bridal jewelry can still be personal, but the market is rewarding pieces that look considered, luxurious and distinctly drawn, not merely safe.
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