Hearts On Fire Debuts Dream Collection, Launches Signature Anniversary Campaign
Hearts On Fire’s Dream collection turns stars and orbits into everyday diamonds, pairing cosmic design with a 30th-anniversary campaign built around personal identity.

Hearts On Fire used a Los Angeles night at Just One Eye to make a clear argument for where diamond jewelry is headed next: less ceremony, more self-definition. The brand’s new Dream collection arrived as an everyday fine-jewelry line with a celestial twist, pairing rings, earrings, necklaces and bracelets in 18k yellow and rose gold with sculptural orbital settings and a pierced star motif on the back of each setting.
The collection was designed by Yunjo Lee, Hearts On Fire’s chief creative officer, who joined the brand in September 2023 after work at Tiffany & Co., Mejuri, Bucherer, Michael Kors Jewelry, John Hardy and Vera Wang Fine Jewelry. Lee, who lives in a Connecticut farmhouse with her artist husband, said the inspiration came from the poetry of outer space, including galaxies, planets, movement, light and infinite possibilities. Some Dream pieces are convertible and can be worn multiple ways, a detail that helps the collection move beyond red-carpet polish and into the kind of daily rotation that luxury jewelry brands are chasing.
That shift matters. Hearts On Fire has been repositioning itself as a luxury diamond jewelry brand rather than only a diamond brand, after Rebecca Foerster said the company had lost its way and needed a refresh amid pressure from lab-grown diamonds. Dream fits that reset neatly: the cosmic language keeps the diamonds aspirational, but the proportions and versatility make them feel less formal, more personal, and easier to imagine on a normal Tuesday than locked away for special occasions.
The brand tied the launch to its 30th-anniversary global campaign, What’s Your Signature?, which debuted globally on April 2, 2026. Hearts On Fire said the campaign will unfold through private client experiences, in-store installations, social activations led by creators and tastemakers, and later commemorative special-edition creations. Foerster said the collection was meant to be emotionally resonant, visually striking and designed to inspire self-expression, a formula that explains the commercial appeal of the cosmic-diamond trend.
Stars and orbit motifs are not new to jewelry, but Dream gives them a sharper retail logic. The motif is symbolic without being solemn, and the design language makes diamonds feel intimate rather than ceremonial. That is the sweet spot: a piece that still reads as fine jewelry, but now carries the escapist mood, the promise of possibility and the everyday ease that keeps a spring trend alive well past the season.
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