Alex and Ani’s ACOTAR jewelry brings Night Court symbolism to fans
Alex and Ani’s Night Court pieces turn ACOTAR symbols into low-lift keepsakes, from a $58 Rhysand and Feyre locket to winged rings and Velaris hearts.

Celestial motifs, wing-like contours and engraved lockets give Alex and Ani’s new ACOTAR line the feel of talismans rather than novelty merchandise. The officially licensed A Court of Thorns and Roses collection opens with eight pieces, priced from $44 to $58, including a $58 There You Are Locket Necklace, a $58 Velaris Heart Locket Necklace, a $58 Bat Boys Ring Set of 3, a $44 Nesta and Cassian Ring Set of 2 and linear bracelets devoted to Feyre, Nesta and Elain Archeron.
That pricing is part of the appeal. These are not heavy-handed costume pieces, and they do not need to be. Symbolic jewelry works for fandom because it lets readers wear a story without turning it into a costume, and Alex and Ani leans hard into that idea with motifs drawn from Prythian’s Night Court. The brand says the collection is inspired by the magic, romance and power of Prythian, and its product language frames the pieces as meaning-making objects rather than simple tie-ins.
The strongest example is the There You Are locket, which Alex and Ani ties to the first meeting between Rhysand and Feyre. The piece folds in moons, stars, jasmine flowers, vines and silhouettes, while the copy references the line, “There you are, I’ve been looking for you.” The Velaris heart locket pushes the same idea in a slightly softer direction, turning a place fans already know by heart into a wearable emblem. For readers who respond to ACOTAR as much through symbols as through plot, that kind of detail matters more than a logo ever could.

The timing is smart. Sarah J. Maas’s official site lists the next two ACOTAR novels for October 27, 2026 and January 12, 2027, and Bloomsbury has said releasing two books 11 weeks apart is “almost unprecedented” in publishing history. ACOTAR also remains a publishing giant, with more than nine million copies sold in the United States alone in 2024, according to Publishers Weekly. That makes the jewelry line feel less like a quick merchandise play than a calculated extension of a universe that already has its own visual language.
Alex and Ani is well matched to that strategy. Carolyn Rafaelian founded the company in Cranston, Rhode Island, in 2004, and its brand identity has long centered on meaning, self-expression and empowerment. In ACOTAR’s courts, characters and constellations, the jeweler has found material that fits its own story: pieces that read as fandom to those who know, and as quietly personal jewelry to everyone else.
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