Pomellato redefines high jewellery with Collezione 1967, a bold, sculptural collection rooted in Milanese design and the brand’s ready-to-wear spirit.
Pomellato has always done things differently. Founded in Milan in 1967, the brand brought a prêt-à-porter mindset to fine jewellery — bold, tactile, and built for the everyday. Now, nearly six decades later, its new Collezione 1967 channels that same energy into a high jewellery collection that feels unmistakably Pomellato: confident, architectural, and unapologetically colourful.
At the heart of the collection is a reworking of the gourmette chain — once a symbol of utility, now a sculptural motif in its own right. In pieces like the Blue Chain Cascade Parure, Ceylon sapphires flow around fluid diamond-set links, while the Yellow Diamond Moon Parure takes a 12‑carat fancy yellow diamond and frames it in something unexpected: white-gold chainwork more often seen in streetwear than haute joaillerie.
Blue Chain Cascade Parure
The collection also leans into asymmetry — not as a design flourish, but as a way to play with movement and proportion. A standout is the Asimmetrico Tanzanite Parure, where a 55‑carat tanzanite stone appears almost suspended mid‑air in a rotating rose-gold structure. Pieces like the Zigzag Supreme Parure take the chain motif even further, with dense pavé work and angular silhouettes that required more than 1,400 hours to complete.
Asimmetrico Tanzanite Parure
Zigzag Supreme Parure
Where some maisons still treat colour as secondary to diamonds, Pomellato puts it centre stage. The Iconica Extreme Parure is a case in point — a saturated combination of 47 carats of green tourmalines and bluish-green stones, offset by warm rose gold and signature diamond detailing.
Iconica Extreme Parure
Bold volumes in rose gold showcase Pomellato's goldsmithing excellence across necklace, bracelet, ring and earrings. In the necklace, dégradé links grow toward the center, with baguette and brilliant-cut diamonds illuminating the entire suite
Collezione 1967 isn’t simply a look back. It’s a statement of identity — one that draws from Pomellato’s Milanese heritage without being bound by it. Under the creative direction of Vincenzo Castaldo and the backing of the Kering group, the house continues to walk the line between craft and innovation, past and present.
This is high jewellery, yes — but it’s also wearable sculpture. Collezione 1967 doesn’t whisper; it holds the room. There’s nothing retrospective about its attitude, even if the name nods to the year it all began.
Four distinct chains aligned in rose and white gold—two adorned with pavé diamonds
Discover the full Collezione 1967
Explore the complete line-up and behind-the-scenes insights at Pomellato’s official site. Want more inspiration? Follow @pomellato on Instagram for exclusive imagery, live debut moments, and creative storytelling.
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