Mousson Atelier debuts music-themed enamel and diamond jewelry in Las Vegas
A 49 mm violin brooch will anchor Mousson Atelier’s first Luxury Las Vegas showing, where piano, harp and guitar motifs turn the booth into a music score in gold and enamel.

Mousson Atelier is arriving at Luxury in Las Vegas with a clear point of view: music can be the hook that keeps a jewelry collection from disappearing into the noise of a giant trade fair. The house’s debut at the show will center on enamel-and-diamond brooches shaped like a violin, piano, harp and guitar, a lineup that gives retailers something more legible than another generic fine-jewelry launch.
The strongest piece is the violin brooch, a signature design from the brand’s Artistic Collection. It measures 17.20 x 49 mm and weighs 10.03 grams, a compact scale that reads as collectible rather than ornamental filler. Transparent enamel gives the brooch a glassy finish, while the back carries a singing bird and rosebush, details that push it from literal instrument mimicry into object jewelry with a small narrative of its own. For buyers scanning a crowded booth, that kind of specificity matters.
Mousson Atelier’s musical language extends beyond the violin. The brand also makes a piano brooch in 18K white gold with black enamel and diamonds, and a harp brooch in 18K yellow and white gold with sapphires. The harp motif has deeper historical resonance on the company’s product page, which traces the instrument’s roots to around 3000 BCE and points to the modern double-action pedal harp developed by Sébastien Erard in Paris in 1820. That mix of reference and gemstone craft gives the collection a more editorial feel than a simple themed novelty line.

The company is now based in Bangkok, but it was founded in St. Petersburg by Maria Krasnova, Alexander Sokolov and Mikhail Epstein. That history helps explain the brand’s blend of old-world symbolism and contemporary execution. Mousson Atelier says it combines traditional styles with new techniques and uses innovative technology while emphasizing quality and beauty, and its Artistic Collection is built around brooches that resemble musical and art instruments. The concept is unusual enough to stand apart, but still familiar enough for retailers to understand quickly.
Luxury 2026 runs May 27 through June 1 at The Venetian Expo in Las Vegas, with invite-only days on May 27 and 28. The main JCK show floor opens May 29 and continues through June 1, and Mousson Atelier’s booth is listed as LUX400. In a fair where attention is scarce and visual shorthand matters, the brand’s challenge will be to prove that narrative jewelry can do more than charm the eye. The violin brooch suggests it can.
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