Style Edit: Cartier Le Chœur des Pierres high jewellery, feted by Zoe Saldaña and Shu Qi

Pieces including the Tutti Kanya, Tellura, Haryma and Panthère Kentia were shown at a Saint-Tropez chateau alongside art by Damien Hirst, Yves Klein and Anselm Kiefer

The name of the collection – literally “the chorus of stones” – plays on two different readings in French. While “chœur” refers to a chorus of voices, its pronunciation sounds like the word “cœur”, the French word for “heart”. That duality is at the core of the collection, which puts the gemstones at the heart of each design and lets every design serve the stone rather than overpower it. Cartier describes the collection as an orchestra, with coloured diamonds, sapphires, rubies and emeralds playing in concert while gemologists, designers, jewellers, setters and polishers work together behind the scenes.


One of the most colourful pieces in the collection is the Tutti Kanya necklace, with a huge 30.33-carat engraved emerald from Zambia. The gem is surrounded by flowers, leaves and berries, all picked out in rubies, sapphires and emeralds, creating a tapestry of visual textures and tones. The necklace recalls the maison’s signature Tutti Frutti motif, introduced in the 1920s and an iconic Cartier style for its use of many multicoloured gems.

The Tellura necklace, crafted with 30 uniquely shaped diamonds, manages to stand out even within a collection defined by vibrant hues. This piece perfectly illustrates Cartier’s approach to high jewellery: modern and free-spirited rather than daunting or restrictive.