cartier | the grain de café necklace

Cartier.

Cartier has unveiled the latest evolution of its ‘Grain de Café’ collection, debuting a radiant new necklace that further explores the Maison’s historical obsession with transforming the ‘ordinary’ into the extraordinary. Drawing inspiration from a humble coffee bean, the new piece focuses on fluidity, reimagining yellow gold as a supple, hand-woven mesh.

The collection, which first appeared in the Cartier vocabulary in 1938 under the legendary creative director Jeanne Toussaint, has long been a symbol of 1950s glamour. Toussaint – the woman responsible for the iconic ‘Panthère’ motif – was fascinated by the idea of elevated nature, choosing the coffee bean as a motif that felt both organic and architecturally precise.

A hand-woven mesh extends from the iconic Palmier chain, creating a drape that mimics the movement of fine silk against the skin. Cartier’s artisans have developed a fluid structure that drapes like haute couture fabric, ensuring the necklace moves with the wearer. The design features a fringe of gold coffee beans punctuated by delicate settings that play with light and transparency. In keeping with the Maison’s penchant for secret luxury, the piece is finished with a concealed clasp at the reverse to maintain the unbroken geometry of the design.

Cartier.

Cartier.

Global ambassador Elle Fanning has become the face of this revival, recently showcasing how the gadrooned gold surfaces refract light in a way that feels instinctive and natural. Craftsmanship remains the primary driver here, with thirty different specialists spending upwards of 120 hours to assemble a single piece from over 60 prototypes.

While the collection feels contemporary, its historical pedigree cements its status. The ‘Grain de Café’ was famously championed by Princess Grace of Monaco (the inimitable Grace Kelly), who received a set as a gift from Prince Rainier III. She wore the coffee-bean motifs in her 1956 wedding portraits and during a state visit to the White House to meet President Kennedy, effectively making the ordinary bean a staple of royal wardrobes. This latest iteration suggests that while the bean itself remains humble, its capacity for reinvention is infinite, proving that the most enduring icons are often those hidden in plain sight.

Discover more about the Grain de Café collection here.

photography. courtesy of Cartier
words. Gennaro Costanzo