Mejuri expands Puzzle collection with sterling silver stacking rings
Mejuri turned its Puzzle line into a silver-first layering system, betting that shoppers want modular stacks, mixed metals and lower-commitment price points.

Mejuri is making a clear wager on the way women are building jewelry wardrobes now: less all-gold uniformity, more modular pieces that can be added, mixed and reworked over time. On March 31, the Toronto-based brand expanded its Puzzle collection beyond its original 18-karat yellow gold vermeil into sterling silver, adding necklace slider charms and deepening a line built around architectural stacking rings.
The move follows a strong reception for the collection, which debuted in August 2025 and quickly proved that Puzzle was more than a styling concept. Mejuri says 60 percent of customers own three or more Puzzle pieces, a telling figure in a category where the appeal lies in accumulation as much as in any single ring. The collection now includes 28 rings in total, with 14 sterling silver styles that span birthstone designs, a plain band and a pavé white-sapphire option.
Price matters here, and Mejuri knows it. The new sterling silver rings retail from $118 to $128, while the existing gold vermeil versions sit between $128 and $148. The slider charms are priced from $128 to $158. That places Puzzle squarely in the brand’s accessible luxury lane, where most core items sit under $300 even as the broader assortment stretches from about $50 to more than $2,000. In a climate of more selective spending and rising gold prices, that positioning gives silver a sharper commercial logic than nostalgia alone.

The design language also explains why Puzzle has traction. This is jewelry that invites composition, not completion. A silver birthstone ring can sit beside a vermeil band; a pavé white-sapphire ring can add texture without pushing the whole stack into excess. The new necklace sliders extend that idea beyond the hand, turning the collection into a more fully modular system and reinforcing Mejuri’s personalization strategy.
Senior jewelry design director Nicole Ghosn has framed silver as a way to keep the collection modern and wearable while supporting continued interest in mixed metals. That thinking is visible in the brand’s wider merchandising, too: its stackable-rings category now spans hundreds of products, with Puzzle listings in both sterling silver and 18k gold vermeil. Mejuri is not simply adding another finish. It is building a case for jewelry that behaves like a wardrobe, where the pleasure lies in how the pieces assemble.
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