Tiffany & Co. has officially unveiled the highly anticipated spring segment of its extraordinary high jewelry collection: The Blue Book 2026: Hidden Garden. Guided by Nathalie Verdeille, Chief Artistic Officer, the new assortment delves into the enchanting secret worlds of nature, capturing sparkling beads of morning dew on petals through the medium of natural, flawless diamonds and exotic colored gemstones.

The collection serves as an enduring tribute to the legendary 20th-century designer Jean Schlumberger, whose organic, whimsical fascination with the universe's flora and fauna redefined the Tiffany & Co. brand aesthetic from the moment he joined in 1956.

The Butterfly Metamorphosis

The inaugural chapter of the Hidden Garden explores the butterfly—one of the House's most beloved and recurring motifs. Gwyneth Paltrow famously teased the collection at the 2026 Oscars, wearing a magnificent Tiffany & Co. platinum and 18-karat yellow gold necklace on the red carpet. Anchoring her ensemble were three oval-shaped Fancy Vivid Yellow diamonds, including an internally flawless 2.19-carat centerpiece surrounded by VVS1 and VVS2 yellow and white diamonds.

A Return to the 'Bird on a Rock'

The legendary Bird on a Rock, first sketched by Schlumberger in 1965 after encountering a yellow cockatoo in Guadeloupe, returns to center stage. The updated iteration spreads its pavé diamond wings above magnificent, cushion-cut Santa Maria-hued aquamarines from Brazil. Framed against custom-cut green chrysoprase beads, the transformable piece can shift from necklace to brooch on a whim.

"I try to make everything look as if it were growing, uneven, organic. I want to capture the irregularity of the universe." — Jean Schlumberger

Exotic Blooms: Jasmine & Marguerite

Beyond the avian and monarch inspirations, the botanical elements of the collection shine through the Jasmine and Marguerite suites. Intricate platinum braiding wraps around massive cushion-cut lilac kunzites, resurrecting the design philosophy of Schlumberger’s famous 1962 Jasmine necklace—a favorite of heiress Bunny Mellon.

Concurrently, the Daisy pieces leverage negative space, encrusting overlapping petals with D-color, internally flawless diamonds that command light perfectly, accompanied by unenhanced pink and purple sapphires that mimic the gentle, asymmetrical blooming of fresh flowers in spring.