The golden bead, reimagined in the Perlée, has long been part of the maison’s visual vocabulary, including the Twist and Alhambra creationsAt a time when high jewellery collections often lean towards spectacle, the enduring appeal of the Perlée collection from Van Cleef & Arpels lies in something far more restrained: the quiet power of repetition, proportion and craftsmanship.First introduced in 2008, the collection transformed one of the maison’s long-standing design codes – the polished golden bead – into an entire jewellery language of its own.The Van Cleef & Arpels 2026 Perlée collection has evolved since its introduction in 2008. Photo: HandoutToday, Perlée continues to evolve with a new series of three-row rings that revisit the house’s fascination with volume and movement. Crafted in yellow, white and rose gold, the designs build upon the aesthetic language introduced with the Perlée five-row rings in 2022, though the mood here feels softer and more sculptural. Graduated golden beads wrap around the finger in carefully balanced proportions, creating pieces that appear almost fluid.The new additions also underline the maison’s ongoing mastery of restraint. Rather than relying on oversized stones or overt statements, the rings draw their impact from surface play. A diagonal line of brilliant-cut diamonds slices through the rows of polished beads, creating flashes of light that shift subtly with the movement of the hand. The stones themselves adhere to the exacting standards long associated with high jewellery at Van Cleef & Arpels, selected for exceptional colour and clarity before undergoing further in-house quality control.The Van Cleef & Arpels three-row Perlée diamond ring in rose gold. Photo: HandoutElsewhere, coloured gemstones introduce a richer, more saturated energy to the collection. Emeralds and sapphires are paired with yellow gold, while rubies sit against rose gold settings, producing combinations that feel warm, tactile and unmistakably jewel-centric rather than trend-driven. Particularly striking is the way the stones are set closely together using an intricate nail-setting technique, which allows colour to flow seamlessly across the surface of the ring.Making of the Van Cleef & Arpels three-row Perlée couleurs ring with yellow gold and emeralds. Photo: HandoutWhat makes Perlée compelling, however, is not simply its decorative appeal, but its ability to translate archival codes into something contemporary. The golden bead has long occupied an important place within the maison’s visual vocabulary. In the 1960s, it appeared alongside coral, turquoise and lapis lazuli in the Twist creations, reflecting the era’s appetite for bold colour and rounded forms. By the late 1960s, it became inseparable from the Alhambra collection, where it framed the now-iconic quatrefoil motif.Perlée strips that signature back to its essence. The bead becomes structure, texture and ornament all at once – a deceptively simple detail transformed through proportion, craftsmanship and repetition. In an era increasingly dominated by maximalism, the collection’s enduring appeal lies in precisely that subtle confidence.
Style Edit: The evolution of Van Cleef & Arpels’ Perlée collection
The golden bead, reimagined in the Perlée, has long been part of the maison’s visual vocabulary, including the Twist and Alhambra creations.











