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How Cartier is reinventing the classic Trinity collection for its 100th anniversary by adding edgy angles to the iconic rings, bracelets and earrings made famous by Grace Kelly and Jean Cocteau

Grace Kelly wearing a Trinity ring at the Cannes festival, 1955. Photo: Handout
Grace Kelly wearing a Trinity ring at the Cannes festival, 1955. Photo: Handout
Cartier

  • Squaring the circle? To celebrate the centenary of the Trinity range, Cartier gave it an update, transforming the classic circular designs into quadrilaterals
  • Cérède recalls how French writer Jean Cocteau wore the OG ring as a symbol of love for his partner and that her own mother had two Trinity bangles – screen stars Grace Kelly and Alain Delon were also fans

How do you reinvent an icon? That was the challenge faced by Marie-Laure Cérède, Cartier’s creative director of jewellery and watches, when tasked with updating one of the Parisian jeweller’s signature collections.

Trinity bracelet in white, rose and yellow gold. Photo: Handout
Trinity bracelet in white, rose and yellow gold. Photo: Handout

To celebrate the centenary of the Trinity range, Cérède and her team came up with something quite unexpected and radical. Previous bracelets, rings and pendants in the collection were immediately recognisable thanks to the three intertwined bands in yellow, white and rose gold. The latest pieces come in what she calls a “cushion shape”, a term used to describe gems cut into a square or rectangle with rounded corners. In other words, she turned the circular bands of Trinity into squares, in a remarkable departure from the traditional design that still stays true to its spirit.

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Alain Delon photographed by Patrice Habans on the set of the movie Il Gattopardo, directed by Luchino Visconti (1963). Photo: Handout
Alain Delon photographed by Patrice Habans on the set of the movie Il Gattopardo, directed by Luchino Visconti (1963). Photo: Handout

“When we thought about redesigning Trinity we realised that it wouldn’t be easy,” says Cérède. “It’s an icon because it’s perfect … so we started asking ourselves what the fundamentals of Trinity are: three intertwined bands. Everyone plays with it, like a fidget toy, so we wanted to keep that and also to say something else but not something completely different from what already exists.”

Trinity ring in white, rose and yellow gold, set with 435 brilliant-cut diamonds totalling 3.50 carats. Photo: Handout
Trinity ring in white, rose and yellow gold, set with 435 brilliant-cut diamonds totalling 3.50 carats. Photo: Handout

Cérède spent more than a year developing the new creations, working on details such as the noise that the bands make when wearers move their arms or play with them, ensuring that it wouldn’t be different from that of the original. “This is not the first time we tried to look again at an icon and it’s not easy to do something new,” she says. “We started with a real band and we compressed it, relaxed it and played with the material. It was incremental and we had many prototypes made. Everything was done considering the fundamentals of Trinity: it glides onto your finger or arm and makes that noise. From that we started to work the volume like a sculpture; it was a work of millimetres to calibrate everything, a game of ergonomic essentials.”

The poet, playwright and filmmaker Jean Cocteau in 1951. He is wearing two Cartier Trinity rings. Photo: Handout
The poet, playwright and filmmaker Jean Cocteau in 1951. He is wearing two Cartier Trinity rings. Photo: Handout

Unlike other Cartier signatures such as the Love and Juste un Clou lines, Trinity stands out for its suppleness and flexibility, which Cérède says is an extremely modern approach if you consider how it is much older than those other collections.

Formerly the fashion editor of the South China Morning Post, Vincenzo La Torre is the chief editor of Style, the South China Morning Post’s luxury monthly publication. Born and raised in Italy, Vincenzo started his career in journalism after graduating from Columbia University in New York, where he studied East Asian Languages and Cultures with a focus on Japanese and Chinese art. He has previously worked for Vogue Japan in Tokyo, Harper's Bazaar in Singapore and Prestige in Hong Kong. Before joining the Post as fashion editor in 2017, Vincenzo was a member of the launch team of Vogue Arabia in Dubai. He covers topics such as jewellery, watches, luxury, beauty, celebrity, entertainment and lifestyle, and has interviewed some of the most influential designers and CEOs in the luxury industry. Vincenzo speaks Italian, French, Japanese and Mandarin, and is a regular at high-profile events such as fashion week in Milan and Paris.