The luxury goods company said founder Ippolita Rostagno will remain at the brand’s helm.
Roberto Coin Has So Much Newness for Fall and Winter
The latest pieces from the Italian jeweler combine favored motifs with of-the-moment trends.

New York—Roberto Coin’s fall and winter 2020 offerings mix the best of the Italian jewelry company’s most-loved motifs with on-trend styles, and there’s plenty to choose from.
The “Venetian Princess” collection, featuring its signature textured engraving, receives a colorful update for the season, with the addition of mother-of-pearl, malachite and jade styles.
Wide clasped bangles, convertible sautoir necklaces and brooches are available with the gemstones.
Making the collection even more wearable for every day, new petite-sized jewels are available in the motif, like stud earrings, studs with front-facing hoops, and huggies with hanging floral motifs. Pendant necklaces and station pendants are also available in the smaller size.
A major trend Roberto Coin is embracing is tassels, added to styles in the “Princess” and “Barocco” collections.
Pendant necklaces, earrings and even rings feature the fun accoutrement, while a bangle with long fringe is one of the new hero items.
In addition to tassels, Roberto Coin is experimenting with long lengths with its “Zipper” pieces as well.
The scintillating styles are available as Y-necklaces that are moveable, plus long dangling gold bead earrings that can be worn multiple ways—straight and long, or wrapped to create a hoop.
Medallions have been a hot trend for the past couple of years and the look is only growing in popularity, with Roberto Coin in on the action this season, transforming some of its signatures pieces into medallion form.
The company’s “Royal Princess Flower” and “Venetian Princess” collections both feature medallion styles, which can be worn as Y-necklaces.
The Venetian Princess versions also feature zodiac style-medallions.
For bracelet lovers, the brand doesn’t disappoint, with an emphasis on new stretchy bracelets in a number of its motifs. They’re perfect for stacking and collecting, the jeweler noted.
Roberto Coin is also dipping its toe into the charm trend, the most exciting iteration of which is a new “Dangle Bangle” or bangle bracelet with one hanging charm, whether a Roberto Coin motif or an initial, four-leaf clover, cross, Star of David, butterfly, sun or heart.
The new “Love in Verona” collection, an ode to the home city of Romeo and Juliet, features Roberto Coin’s four-petal flower as a demure accent on bangles, hoop earrings and rings.
Like most of the jeweler’s assortment, items are available in 18-karat yellow, rose or white gold, with or without diamond pavé or accented with colored gemstones like the
“Royal Opera” is an updated reissue of the “Opera” collection Roberto Coin launched in 1996, one of his first in the United States.
Flexible band rings, hoop earrings and bracelets feature a braided gold texture and are accented with diamonds.
The “Palazzo Ducale” collection, meanwhile, is also all about graphic shapes, but diamonds, rather than squares, featuring splashes of color courtesy of malachite, jade and mother-of-pearl.
Plain gold chains have been having a major moment in fine jewelry and Roberto Coin is getting in on the action, deliver meticulous, high-quality layering pieces to be worn now and passed down for generations.
The brand has created its own versions of the now-uber-popular paper clip chain, various box chains, an almond-shaped chain, oro chains and more, available as bracelets and necklaces.
Adding to the lineup of basics are lots and lots of new gold hoops in varying widths, lengths and shapes, all in sumptuous 18-karat gold.
Roberto Coin also has come out with a bezel-set (and cleverly titled) “Diamonds by the Inch” collection, comprised of pendant necklaces and station necklaces.
The designer’s gardens at his home in Vicenza inspired the new “Petals” pieces, which are reminiscent of a Roman-style floral crown, crafted in mixed metals with diamonds. The statement pieces are available as flattering collars, bracelets and rings.
The “Veneto” collection is an ode to intrecciato weaving employed in textiles, leather and baskets, while “Obelisco” is a high-impact fine jewelry take on studs that feels at once edgy and elegant.
There are also new takes on the “Pois Moi” collection, featuring soft, rounded squares that are most eye-catching as bangles, plus the “Pois Moi Luna” range, in which the Pois Moi indents are set every which way in ode to the craters on the moon.
The smooth simplicity of the “Portofino” bangles, meanwhile, are the ultimate in wearable luxury for women ages 20 to 80.
To see even more Roberto Coin newness, visit the jeweler’s website.
The Latest

Laura Burdese, who joined the Italian luxury brand in 2022, will take on the role in July.

The National Jeweler editors revisit the most noteworthy industry happenings and design trends from 2025.

How Jewelers of America’s 20 Under 40 are leading to ensure a brighter future for the jewelry industry.

Need a gift for the cat lover who has everything? Look no further than our latest Piece of the Week.


It purchased the “Grosse Pièce,” an ultra-complicated Audemars Piguet pocket watch from the ‘20s, for a record-breaking price at Sotheby’s.

The lab-grown diamond grower now offers custom engagement and fashion jewelry through its Kira Custom Lab Jewelry service.

Roseco’s 704-page catalog showcases new lab-grown diamonds, findings, tools & more—available in print or interactive digital editions.

Chandler got his start at Michelson Jewelers and has served as DCA president and CEO since 2001. He will retire at the end of the month.

The boutique is slated to open this week inside Terminal 8, offering pre-owned Rolex watches and more to international travelers.

Sponsored by Digital Monitoring Products

The special-edition egg pendant ingested in a New Zealand jewelry store was recovered after a six-day wait.

Associate Editor Natalie Francisco plays favorites with Piece of the Week, selecting a standout piece of jewelry from each month of 2025.

The “Love and Desire” campaign is inspired by the magic that follows when one’s heart leads the way, said the brand.

Two awardees will receive free tuition for an educational course at the Swiss lab, with flights and lodging included.

Berta de Pablos-Barbier will replace Alexander Lacik at the start of January, two months earlier than expected.

Sotheby’s held its first two jewelry sales at the Breuer building last week, and they totaled nearly $44 million.

Winners will receive free registration and lodging for its fourth annual event in Detroit.

Here are six ideas for making more engaging content for Instagram Reels and TikTok, courtesy of Duvall O’Steen and Jen Cullen Williams.

The honorees include a notable jewelry brand, an industry veteran, and an independent retailer.

Carlos Jose Hernandez and Joshua Zuazo were sentenced to life without the possibility of parole in the 2024 murder of Hussein “Sam” Murray.

Yood will serve alongside Eduard Stefanescu, the sustainability manager for C.Hafner, a precious metals refiner in Germany.

The New Orleans jeweler is also hosting pop-up jewelry boutiques in New York City and Dallas.

Set in a Tiffany & Co. necklace, it sold for $4.2 million, the highest price and price per carat paid for a Paraíba tourmaline at auction.

The jeweler’s “Deep Freeze” display showcases its iconic jewelry designs frozen in a vintage icebox.

Take luxury gifting to new heights this holiday season with the jeweler’s showstopping 12-carat sphene ring.

This year's theme is “Unveiling the Depths of the Ocean.”




















