Tiffany & Co. returns with Blue Book 2026: Hidden Garden, a high jewelry collection that looks to nature’s quieter, more elusive transformations. Designed by Nathalie Verdeille, the spring chapter unfolds as a study in movement, metamorphosis, and the unseen details that define the natural world.
Drawing from the legacy of Jean Schlumberger, the collection reimagines archival motifs through a contemporary lens. Butterflies, birds, and florals take on sculptural form, brought to life through rare gemstones and intricate craftsmanship. Across the collection, pieces blur the line between jewelry and object, with select designs engineered to transform from pendant to brooch.
The Butterfly story leads with a delicate interplay of padparadscha and Montana sapphires, while diamond iterations reinterpret the motif in abstract form. From there, nature becomes more immersive. In Monarch, twisting vines and hidden butterflies frame vivid sapphires, while Bird on a Rock revisits one of the house’s most recognizable designs, pairing animated forms with saturated aquamarines.
Avian themes continue through Paradise Bird and Parrot, where bold color combinations and enamel work introduce a more expressive, almost fantastical energy. Elsewhere, Bee explores structured geometry through honeycomb settings and exceptional diamonds, balancing precision with organic movement.
Floral stories anchor the collection with Jasmine, Marguerite, and Bloom each reinterpret botanical forms through layered textures, negative space, and unexpected material choices, while Twin Bud and Palm extend the narrative with sculptural vines, emeralds, and vivid rubies that emphasize growth and transformation.
The collection reflects Tiffany’s ongoing focus on craftsmanship and gemology, pairing rare stones with complex, highly technical settings that push traditional jewelry design forward.
The spring expression of Blue Book 2026: Hidden Garden debuts April 16th, 2026 at a private gala with additional chapters set to roll out through summer and fall.








