Style Edit: Hermès’ new high jewellery collection, Les Formes de la Couleur, translates Pierre Hardy’s take on colour theory into wearable art featuring diamonds, emeralds, rubies and sapphires

The luxury brand has always celebrated colour in bags like the Birkin and its famous carrés, or silk scarves, and now this latest haute joaillerie collection explores it through precious gems

“This collection expresses colour in shapes,” says Pierre Hardy, creative director of Hermès Jewellery. “I wanted to build a strong, autonomous and independent identity.” That vision unfolds across a series of striking, sculptural pieces, where geometry and colour theory meet the craftsmanship of haute joaillerie.

Hardy, who studied colour theory at university, revisited it with a fresh perspective, using it as the foundation for designs that challenge how we see jewellery. In the Portraits de la Couleur chapter, rubies are structured into perfect squares, while sapphires form deep blue circles and beryls become bright yellow triangles. “If red is square, what is that square saying?” Hardy muses. “It could remind you of a superhero’s emblem, a work of art, a memory.”

Beyond structure, the collection plays with texture and movement. The Fresh Paint pieces feature the illusion of brushstrokes on canvas, with precious and semi-precious stones forming fluid, painterly patterns in rich gradients. In Arc en Couleurs, articulated bracelets and necklaces shimmer with subtle colour transitions – one necklace features nearly 1,400 individually selected stones to achieve its seamless spectrum. Designed to mould to the body’s curves, these pieces feel as much like wearable art as jewellery. “I wanted to explore the whole spectrum,” Hardy explains. “Rather than stifling diversity, I wanted to celebrate it.”

There’s also an element of science at play, with pieces designed to capture the effects of light diffraction. The Supracolor necklace, a hypnotic, architectural piece, uses rutilated quartz as a prism, revealing hidden rays of colour beneath its surface; while Hermès Diaprés contrasts emerald-cut diamonds and sapphires with iridescent mother-of-pearl, the gems glowing softly against intricate settings. Meanwhile, Color Flash takes a modern approach, with pavé-set, pixelated compositions of vividly coloured stones appearing almost like a digital screen frozen in time.

This collection marks a shift in the way Hermès approaches haute bijouterie – bold, experimental and entirely unafraid of colour. It’s jewellery that doesn’t just decorate but sparks conversation. “I wanted to express a lot of ideas at the same time,” Hardy says. “It’s possible to want different things all at once.” If this is what colour at Hermès looks like, the possibilities are endless.