Alex and Ani launches ACOTAR jewelry collection inspired by Night Court
Alex and Ani turned ACOTAR into Night Court charm jewelry, with lockets, celestial motifs and prices from $44 to $58 as some first-drop pieces sold out in hours.

Alex and Ani has turned Sarah J. Maas’s A Court of Thorns and Roses into jewelry that reads less like costume merchandise and more like daily allegiance. The officially licensed collection opened with a Night Court-inspired drop, translating Prythian’s favorite names and symbols into bracelets, necklaces, rings, cuffs and lockets.
The pricing keeps the line in giftable territory, not luxury territory. Featured ACOTAR pieces on the brand’s site run from $44 to $58, a range that puts the collection alongside polished fashion jewelry rather than heirloom metalwork. That middle ground is exactly where fandom jewelry has room to grow: high enough to feel considered, low enough to be bought for a birthday, a book club friend or the reader who wants her allegiance to sit on her wrist instead of a shelf. Alex and Ani, which describes its work as “meaningful charm jewelry” designed to connect and empower, is leaning hard into that sweet spot.

The designs are strongest when they are symbolic first and franchise-specific second. A Feyre bracelet uses a paintbrush, moon and stars, an arrow and a bargain-mark eye, details that nod to the character without turning the piece into overt cosplay. Nesta’s bracelet is built around the Dread Trove, a sword engraved with “STRENGTH” and silver flames, while other pieces pull from Elain, Rhysand, Velaris, the Night Court and the Illyrian wings. The assortment also includes a Bat Boys ring set of three, a Velaris heart locket and the “There You Are” locket, whose interior inscription references Rhysand and Feyre’s first meeting with the line, “There you are, I’ve been looking for you.”
That is what gives the collection staying power beyond the current BookTok rush. The pieces most likely to outlast the franchise moment are the ones that can live as everyday identity jewelry, lockets, linear bracelets and celestial motifs that still read cleanly when the series tag is removed. Some first-drop items sold out within hours, and Alex and Ani is already teasing more ACOTAR pieces and a second collection later in 2026, a sign that fandom jewelry is moving decisively from merch into the kind of personal adornment readers actually wear.
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