Dukachi unveils 59-piece golf pendant with wheat-ear symbolism
Dukachi turned golf’s rare sub-60 score into a 59-piece pendant, pairing a gold, diamond-set club with wheat-ear symbolism rooted in Ukraine.

Dukachi has taken one of golf’s most elusive milestones and recast it as a jewel with cultural memory. The Ukrainian house’s new pendant folds a golf club and ball into a compact form, then sharpens the idea with a wheat-ear shaft, a motif that gives the piece its emotional weight as much as its visual identity.
The pendant is limited to 59 pieces, and each one will be numbered from 1 to 59, a direct nod to “Club 59,” the rare feat of shooting below 60 on an 18-hole championship course. That scarcity is not just a marketing device. It gives the jewel the logic of a collector’s object, the kind of edition that feels marked by achievement rather than mass appeal.
The design itself is more nuanced than the usual sport-to-jewelry translation. Dukachi says the club and ball are crafted in gold and set with diamonds, while the shaft is shaped like an ear of wheat. In Ukrainian symbolism, wheat stands for fertility, abundance, home and unity. That choice keeps the pendant from reading as novelty. It turns a golf reference into a larger story about place, identity and continuity.

The timing of the reference is also exacting. PGA TOUR history had recorded 15 sub-60 rounds as of Jake Knapp’s 59 in February 2025, including 14 rounds of 59 and one 58. By attaching the pendant to that statistical club, Dukachi anchors its symbolism in one of golf’s most recognizable markers of excellence. The result is a piece that speaks fluently to players and collectors alike: rare, legible, and built around a number that already carries prestige.
That approach fits the direction Anna Knyzhenko and Yelyzaveta Knyzhenko have established since founding Dukachi in 2018 as a family-run fine jewelry brand from Ukraine. The company places the pendant within its “Cultural Interpretation” concept, the same instinct that has informed earlier collections inspired by shared Easter traditions. In that sense, the golf pendant is less an isolated novelty than a continuation of Dukachi’s broader argument that fine jewelry can carry community, memory and status in the same small frame.
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