In Paris, Gucci doesn’t just unveil High Jewelry or High Watchmaking—it performs a carefully choreographed evolution of Italian craftsmanship, heritage, and new-world collaboration
At Gucci’s Avenue Montaigne flagship, time moved differently this July. It wasn’t just about seconds ticking on tourbillon watches or the light refracting off a 52-carat aquamarine. Instead, it felt like the House was rewriting its own tempo—fusing past and present in a quietly radical redefinition of what Italian luxury means now.
In a season dominated by maximalism and spectacle, Gucci’s High Jewellery and High Watchmaking collections offered something rarer: nuance. Intention. Depth. This wasn’t just ornamentation; it was a sensory manifesto.
Gucci has always known how to command attention, but in recent years, the House has become more introspective. The latest high jewellery line—anchored by Labirinti Gucci—unfolds like a private journey through a geometrically pruned Italian garden. These are not pieces made for Instagram moments, but rather for quiet contemplation.
A necklace, articulated in rows of diamonds, blooms at its centre with a round 24.75 ct tanzanite and a serene cushion-cut Paraiba tourmaline. It’s not simply a display of wealth—it feels like a love letter to symmetry, disruption, and balance. A ring with a 6.02 ct Brazilian aquamarine sits like a jewel plucked from a mythic rose, surrounded by Paraiba petals and shank-set poetry.
There’s an emotional tempo to it all—Gucci is composing, not just designing.
The Horsebit and Marina Chain collections are further evidence that Gucci is no longer interested in repeating its codes—it’s reimagining them.
The Horsebit, long tied to Gucci’s equestrian roots, is now offered as a sapphire-studded bracelet with settings plated in blue metal, lending a subversive vibrancy to a once-staid emblem. Elsewhere, rubies and tsavorites collide on a collar necklace that feels like a dialogue between tradition and rebellion.
And then there’s the Marina Chain, which takes 1960s nautical inspiration and bathes it in rainbow hues—think sapphires, tsavorites, and diamonds arranged like a sun-drenched chromatic current. These aren’t just accessories; they’re acts of reinterpretation. Gucci is rewriting its own DNA with the skill of a master calligrapher—ornate, but never overwrought.
When it comes to Gucci’s High Watchmaking, the level of micro-artistry rivals that of historical ateliers. The new G-Timeless pieces are more than watches—they’re wearable canvases where horology and art coalesce.
One model transforms Vittorio Accornero’s Flora print into a floral microcosm—delicate flowers painted onto a grand feu enamel dial, surrounded by mother-of-pearl, violet jade, and verdite. Another, inspired by a maritime scarf design, features a seascape engraved onto mother-of-pearl with micro-marquetry ships and golden cannon appliqués. Even the escapement—a tourbillon—feels like choreography in motion.
The pièce de résistance? A GUCCI 25H skeleton tourbillon with a staggered diamond setting echoing the Roman Colosseum. Thin as a whispered promise at 8.4mm, it’s an object of technical bravado and sculptural restraint.
Gucci’s timepieces are no longer about simply marking hours—they are architectural, lyrical, and quietly revolutionary.
But perhaps the most surprising—and revealing—chapter in this story is Monili, the new high jewellery collection co-created with Pomellato. It is restrained. Purposeful. Almost anti-flash.
In a world where louder usually means better, Monili dares to speak softly. A leather minaudière with a diamond pavé wrist strap. A sculptural white gold and black leather bracelet that loops like a brushstroke. A brown leather cuff fused with rose gold pavé. These are pieces that reject excess in favour of material poetry.
There’s something radical about that quietness. About pairing stitched leather with diamond knots. It signals not just a partnership but a shift—a tilt towards emotional design, where wearability and symbolism hold equal weight.
This isn’t just Gucci meeting Pomellato. It’s Gucci listening, editing, and evolving.
What Gucci offered in Paris wasn’t a launch event. It was a language lesson—an introduction to the House’s new dialect of luxury. One that speaks of form, emotion, tension, and silence. It’s in the negative space between diamonds. In the lacquered stillness of a cushion-shaped watch dial. In a necklace that mimics a garden maze and finds its clarity in chaos.
ALSO READ: Paris Haute Couture Week 2025: Rahul Mishra’s Couture Is An Ode To The Seven Stages Of Love
It was a rare kind of performance: deeply considered, wildly precious, and entirely human.
In a landscape filled with noise, Gucci’s quiet confidence spoke volumes.