The Sun That Never Sets

Tiffany Reimagines Schlumberger’s Apollo

In the history of fine jewelry, certain pieces shine for their technical mastery — and others illuminate generations. The Apollo collection, conceived by Jean Schlumberger in 1957, belongs to that rare constellation of creations that require no explanation: they are recognized, inherited, coveted.

Today, Tiffany & Co. presents a new reading of that solar masterwork. Not as nostalgic tribute, but as a contemporary declaration. The original silhouette — that brooch that simulated a burst of pure light — resurfaces transformed into rings, earrings, and bracelets that distill sculptural precision and character in equal measure.

The New York House has worked with its already legendary rigor: platinum, 18-karat yellow gold, hand-selected stones, clean cuts, and a visual beauty that allows each ray of metal to vibrate with light. Yet beyond the virtuosity, there is a subtler connection: each piece becomes an extension of personal character.

Apollo by Tiffany is not a reinterpretation. It is an evolution. The new pieces play with the contrast between form and light — gold curves that embrace the body, precise flashes that capture attention without demanding it. Jewelry that follows the silhouette with effortless naturalness and commands the room without trying. Seventy years on, Apollo is reborn with a new radiance: relevant, vibrant, and faithful to its luminous essence.

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