Kelly Rutherford expands The TwentyFour Six with diamond earrings
Kelly Rutherford's sellout pendant returns as 18-karat gold, diamond-set earrings, made in Antwerp and priced at 1,800 euros each.

Kelly Rutherford’s collaboration with The TwentyFour Six has moved from a sold-out sculptural pendant into a smaller, sharper jewelry wardrobe: delicate 18-karat gold earrings set with natural diamonds, made entirely in Antwerp and launched in Paris at Hôtel Château Voltaire. The limited-edition pair was priced at 1,800 euros each, or 3,500 euros for the pair, a jump in material value that matches the shift from the first gold-plated brass run to solid gold and diamonds.
The expansion follows the original pendant, a run of 150 pieces that sold out immediately and helped turn the project into a continuing line rather than a one-time celebrity drop. Rutherford developed that first piece with her brother, Anthony Giovanni Deane, and June Van Thillo, the Antwerp-based founder of The TwentyFour Six, after the group began exchanging ideas around bent bronze sculptures, brutalist jewelry, vintage pieces, a Milan door handle and a César pendant once kept in their mother’s jewelry box. The first design, a sculptural necklace called Avec Amour, set the visual code for what came next: restrained, architectural and deliberately unshowy.
The new earrings keep that language intact. They are still unmistakably unisex in spirit, but they read as more refined and more discreet than the original pendant, with a cleaner profile and enough weight in the material to feel substantial without looking ornate. Rutherford has said she does not like big earrings and prefers lightweight pieces she can wear every day, which explains why this expansion lands less like red-carpet jewelry and more like a careful edit of the first idea. The diamonds are used sparingly, not as surface noise, but as a way to sharpen the gold’s edge.

That restraint fits The TwentyFour Six, which June Van Thillo founded in 2024 as a platform for storytelling through collaborations. Van Thillo, who studied journalism before launching the brand, has built the label around projects that carry a personal narrative, and Rutherford’s line has become unusual for the house because it has kept going past a single drop. The company says another Anthony-driven design is planned for later in 2026, extending a collaboration that started with one sold-out pendant and is now taking shape as a fuller minimalist jewelry wardrobe.
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