Kaitlan Collins Layers Jane Win Dainty Necklaces Into Elevated, Accessible Style
CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins layers two Jane Win pieces under $200 into a signature collarbone stack, proving intentional dainty jewelry works harder than statement pieces.

Picture the thin gold bead necklace that sits just above the collarbone, catching the flat light of a television studio without competing for attention. Now imagine a second chain beside it: slightly longer, ending in a small sun-face coin, double-sided and weighted in a way that tells you immediately it means something. This is the pairing Kaitlan Collins reaches for, and it is quietly doing more stylistic work than most anchors' full jewelry wardrobes combined.
The Collins Formula
Collins, CNN's anchor and host of *The Source*, has built a recognizable accessories signature around restraint rather than volume. Her on-air jewelry runs toward thin chains, small pendants, and a slim silver watch, even when the clothes underneath are high-fashion. The pairing that caught close attention: a gold bead double-wrap necklace layered over a sun-motif coin pendant on a fine chain, both from the Philadelphia-area brand Jane Win. The double-wrap necklace retails for approximately $198, placing it firmly in the accessible-fine tier rather than costume jewelry or investment fine jewelry. What makes the combination notable is not the price point alone, but the specificity of it. Collins isn't reaching for quantity. She's choosing two pieces with distinct visual weights and letting them work against each other.
Jane Win: Meaning as a Design Principle
Jane Win was founded by Jane Winchester Paradis after two decades in fashion design and marketing. She left her corporate career with one central idea: jewelry that carries genuine intention, pieces you buy to mark a milestone, to remind yourself of something important, or to give someone who needs a touchstone. The brand draws visual inspiration from vintage coin jewelry of the 1900s, translating that heritage into 14-karat gold-plated sterling silver pendants, each stamped with a word or motif on one face and the JW logo on the other. The coins are double-sided by design, wearable either way, the intention as much a part of the object as the metal.
The brand's breakthrough came in late 2019 when Goop reached out about featuring the Forever coin in their holiday gift guide. That single placement changed the trajectory of Jane Win's wholesale business. Since then, Gwyneth Paltrow has named her own favorite Jane Win picks, and Jenna Bush Hager wears her Jane Win pieces on the *Today* show regularly, a fact Paradis has credited with transforming orders on the Love Full Heart pendant. Country artist Miranda Lambert was spotted wearing the JW Letter Coin in early 2026. The through line in all of these endorsements is the same: public-facing women who want jewelry that communicates something personal without distracting from their work.
The Specific Pieces
The gold bead double-wrap necklace Collins favors is structured as a flexible strand of small gold beads long enough to wrap twice at the collarbone, creating subtle layered texture in a single piece. At $198, it sits alongside the brand's beaded styles including the Sun Reflection Beaded Necklace at $188, all offering the same 14k gold-plated finish. The sun-motif coin pendant she pairs it with belongs to Jane Win's signature coin family, pendants that typically measure around 1.25 inches in diameter and carry enough heft to register visually but not enough to pull at a delicate chain. The STRONG Rising Sun coin, one of Jane Win's most prominent sun designs, features a blazing sun face with rays on the front surface set with amethyst, pink tourmaline, citrine, and white topaz, all mounted in 14k gold-plated sterling silver. The back reads STRONG, the pendant's stated intention: a daily reminder, as Paradis describes it, that "the sun rises every day and brings new opportunity."
Coin pendant pricing across the Jane Win line runs from roughly $128 for simpler styles up to $298 and beyond for embellished versions, with a solid gold edition reaching $1,998 for collectors willing to make the full commitment. The sweet spot for most buyers sits in the $198 to $298 range, directly competitive with brands like Mejuri and Catbird working the same accessible-fine territory.
Why This Layering Approach Works
The Collins combination succeeds for a precise technical reason: the two pieces occupy different visual planes without fighting for the same space. The bead double-wrap creates horizontal texture at the base of the neck, while the coin pendant descends on a finer chain to hover slightly lower, adding a single focal point. The effect reads as intentional rather than accumulated, which is the hardest thing to achieve when layering delicate jewelry.
A few principles make this kind of stack work:
- Keep chains at graduated lengths, with at least half an inch of separation between layers so pieces don't tangle or read as a single mass of metal.
- Mix textures rather than duplicating them. The matte bead surface reads differently from a flat, stamped coin, creating contrast even when both are in the same gold tone.
- Anchor the look with one piece that carries visual weight (the coin pendant) and keep everything else lighter, so the stack has a clear center of gravity.
- Stay within a single metal family. Collins pairs gold-toned necklaces with a slim silver watch, the one point of contrast in an otherwise tonal approach, but the necklaces themselves don't mix metals.
The Broader Case for Intentional Jewelry
There's a particular kind of discipline required to wear less, especially on camera, where there is always pressure to fill space. Collins' choices reflect a broader shift in how women in public-facing roles are thinking about accessories: not as decoration added on top of an outfit, but as a consistent personal signature that telegraphs taste and deliberateness. Jane Win is positioned precisely for this moment. Paradis built the brand on the idea that jewelry should connect the wearer to something real, a value, a word, a memory, rather than simply completing a look. That proposition lands differently when you watch a news anchor conduct a high-stakes interview with a small sun pendant catching the studio light at her collarbone.
The gold bead double-wrap and the coin pendant are not expensive jewelry. They are not rare. What they are, worn the way Collins wears them, is edited, and that turns out to be the harder thing to pull off.
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