Louis Vuitton expands Color Blossom with layerable jewels, sodalite and diamonds
Ana de Armas fronts Louis Vuitton’s latest Color Blossom push, where 28 new jewels turn Monogram Flowers in mother-of-pearl, pavé diamonds and sodalite into a lesson in layered balance.

Ana de Armas gives Louis Vuitton’s Color Blossom expansion its immediate pull, but the real story is how the house is using one flower to teach a cleaner way to layer fine jewelry. The new release adds 28 jewels, tied to the 130th anniversary of the Monogram canvas, and pushes the Monogram Flower into a richer palette of mother-of-pearl, pavé diamonds and sodalite, the navy-blue stone Louis Vuitton is now introducing to the line.
Color Blossom has been part of the house since 2015, built as a tribute to the Monogram Flower Georges Vuitton imagined in 1896. That history matters because the collection does not rely on a single hero piece. It is built for combination, with Louis Vuitton describing it as designed for bold pairing and infinite chromatic combinations. The product pages reinforce that idea, showing necklaces, rings, bracelets, earrings and pendants that can be worn simply, in double rows or as bracelets, depending on how much presence you want on the body.
The strongest styling cue in the new assortment is repetition with variation. Reporting on the launch says seven pieces use sodalite and five new designs use pink mother-of-pearl, while the range also includes short necklaces, sautoirs, stackable closed rings, sleeper hoop earrings and a diamond-studded ear cuff. That mix gives the collection its high-low tension inside the luxury register: the floral motif repeats, but the surface changes from luminous shell to pavé shimmer to the deeper, denser color of sodalite. One blossom reads as delicate. Two starts to look intentional. Three, if the scale shifts from neck to ear to hand, reads polished rather than overmatched.
Ouyang Nana joins Ana de Armas in the campaign, which Louis Vuitton unveiled in print and digital media on April 6, 2026. The face of the campaign is glamorous, but the underlying idea is practical: choose one motif, then vary the texture and length so the eye has a place to land. A mother-of-pearl pendant can soften a pavé ring; a sodalite jewel can anchor a stack; a diamond ear cuff can keep the look from feeling too sweet. That is the quiet power of Color Blossom at its best, a house flower made versatile enough to move from singular statement to layered composition without losing its shape.
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