Fall 2025’s Jewelry Trends Tap Into Every Side of Your Style
This season doesn’t follow rules—it follows feelings.
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Much like the Fall 2025 ready-to-wear, shoe trends, and It bags, this season’s jewelry direction is less about rules and more about resonance. What’s “in” isn’t a prescription—it’s a prompt. Whether you’re wearing a vintage heirloom passed down through generations, a lucky charm you’ve made your signature, or a DIY bracelet courtesy of your niece’s summer camp arts program, adornment is deeply personal. Fall 2025’s biggest jewelry trends lean into that idea. From industrial-chic pieces—think Coach’s screwdriver earrings or Dries Van Noten’s shoelace necklaces—to irreverent takes on pearls and the bold return of yellow gold, this season’s jewelry isn’t just an accessory. It’s a reflection of mood, instinct, and individuality. How you style it is entirely your own.
The Fall 2025 runways embraced a new kind of ornamentation—one that favored irreverence over rarity. At Coach, sculptural earrings were crafted from chrome screwdrivers. Moschino also transformed light bulbs into chandelier styles, while Dries Van Noten layered knotted shoelaces into intricate neckpieces. Collectively, these designs suggest that jewelry needn’t signal status to make a statement. When the materials feel incidental—or even improvised—the result is playful, self-aware, and refreshingly unbound by the rules.
These are not your grandmother’s dainty mother-of-pearl strands. This season, the classic got a dramatic rewrite. Here, oversized pearls reclaimed old-world glamour in unapologetically bold proportions. At Chanel, they were strung into exaggerated bracelets and handbag chains, while at Schiaparelli, voluminous pearl studs recalled the oversized audacity of the '80s.
The jewelry world has been "broaching" this subject for a while now—pinning brooches to blazers, bags, and even swimwear. But this season, the Fall 2025 runways made it official: statement pins are everywhere. At Miu Miu, Tom Ford, and Tory Burch, brooches became defining details, affixed to coats and dresses, bold and deliberate. Some leaned toward classic styles—think equestrian motifs at Ralph Lauren—while others embraced the surreal, such as Schiaparelli’s oversized, abstract fish shapes. These aren’t quiet embellishments—they’re meant to be seen and heard.
Everyone has their gold preference—some gravitate toward rose tones, others swear by white. But this season, the Fall 2025 runways made a strong case for the return of bold, sun-drenched yellow gold. After seasons dominated by silver and the pared-back palette of “quiet luxury,” designers re-embraced warmth. The kind of gold that once felt gauche suddenly looks right at home.
A conservative tennis bracelet or diamond-line necklace isn’t for everyone. This season, designers proposed alternatives in saturated stones—emerald, sapphire, and other off-classic choices. The silhouettes remain familiar, but the effect is anything but. These are pieces with personality, designed to feel both enduring and entirely current. Jewelry that resists nostalgia, even as it’s made to last.
Just as Bohemia has quietly reentered the fashion scene, jewelry is reflecting that mood with a subtler type of sentimentality. At Chloé and elsewhere, mini lockets and charm bracelets reappeared not as costume-y throwbacks, but as personal, modern keepsakes. These aren’t maximalist memory boards—they’re sophisticated nods to personal storytelling, designed to be worn daily—less about nostalgia and more about grounding your look in something that feels specific—and yours.
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Sara Holzman is the Style Director at Marie Claire, where she has worked in various roles to ensure the brand's fashion content continues to inform, inspire, and shape the conversation around fashion's ever-evolving landscape. A Missouri School of Journalism graduate, she previously held fashion posts at Condé Nast’s Lucky and Self and covered style and travel for Equinox’s Furthermore blog. Over a decade in the industry, she’s guided shoots with top photographers and stylists from concept to cover. Based in NYC, Sara spends off-duty hours running, browsing the farmer's market, making a roast chicken, and hanging with her husband, dog, and cat. Find her on Instagram at @sarajonewyork.