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Buccellati’s Blossoms necklace brings sculptural silver to neckollatage

Buccellati’s 18-flower silver necklace turns neckollatage into a solo act, with nearly 3 carats of pink sapphires and a $10,000 top version.

Priya Sharma··2 min read
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Buccellati’s Blossoms necklace brings sculptural silver to neckollatage
Source: afjewelers.com

Buccellati’s Blossoms necklace makes a blunt argument for the hero piece: when a necklace is built to run from collarbone to bust, multiple chains can feel like noise. The spring 2026 design arrives as a sculptural silver statement with 18 gardenia motifs, nearly 3 carats of pink sapphires, and a warm gold center in each bloom. The top version is priced at $10,000, a figure that puts it in the territory of serious fine jewelry, not a decorative add-on.

That is exactly why the piece fits the growing neckollatage conversation. In this styling lane, the necklace is judged less by length than by how it occupies the space between collarbone and bust. Blossoms lands on the side of intentional volume, the kind of necklace that can replace a stack of delicate chains when the clothes are clean, simple, and tailored. It can also anchor a lighter layered look, but only if the rest is kept restrained enough to let the flowers do the work. The broader shift is clear: silver is no longer just the backdrop for everyday jewelry, but a platform for bold silhouettes that read as polished, not precious in a fussy way.

Buccellati says Blossoms is the house’s first silver jewelry line and a showcase for the creativity of its fourth generation of designers. The collection itself has deeper roots. Buccellati says Blossoms was born in 2009 and was originally composed of two lines, Gardenia and Daisy, with pendants, button earrings, cuff bracelets, rings, and sautoirs in the range. The spring edit revisits those gardenias and daisies through the maison’s signature engraving technique, which gives the silver surface its textured, handcrafted depth.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That family story still defines the brand’s identity. Mario Buccellati founded the house in Milan in 1919, the first New York store followed in 1951, and Gianmaria Buccellati later carried the business into Hong Kong, Japan, and other international markets. Andrea Buccellati has served as president of Buccellati Group since 2013. Against that lineage, Blossoms reads as more than a seasonal necklace. It is Buccellati testing whether silver can carry the same visual authority as gold in the new layering era, and making the case that one strong piece can now do the work of a full stack.

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