How high jewellery designers fell for retro culture: from Coco Chanel’s 30s Jazz Age collection, to Tiffany & Co. and Piaget’s love for the 70s disco era, and Boucheron and Stephen Webster embracing the 80s
- Going 1980s retro, high jewellery maison Boucheron references the Rubik’s Cube, New Wave and Milanese design collective The Memphis Group, while Stephen Webster channels the New Romantic movement
- Tiffany & Co. and Piaget are drawing inspiration from the decadence and vibrancy of the 70s, while Chanel is looking all the way back to the Jazz Age with its ‘1932’ collection of haute joaillerie
For the More is More collection, Choisne riffed on these motifs and 1980s cultural touch points such as the Rubik’s Cube (which inspires a bejewelled necklace), the badges affixed to denim jackets by New Wave teens (reworked into precious brooches), and plastic hair bobbles (transformed into funky lacquer, titanium and white-gold rings).
She has also created a daring magnesium and diamond hair bow that resembles the large-scale 80s pop art sculptures of Roy Lichtenstein, and a gem-encrusted, fully functional pocket in 3D-printed titanium that can be attached magnetically to almost any item of attire. Another piece intended to elevate an otherwise everyday garment is Choisne’s hoodie string adornment (also functional as earrings), in a rainbow of materials including diamonds, lacquer, onyx, opal, gold and titanium.