Why Diamonds And Denim Are The Ultimate Chic Duo
It’s an iconic pairing – nothing says laid-back luxury quite like denim worn with lashings of scintillating stones. Here, CHARLIE BOYD explores the jewels and jeans that were made for each other
Denim has deep roots. Its name was coined from the French phrase serge de Nîmes, after the southern French city where it was first made in the 17th century – because it resembled serge, a local woollen twill. By the 18th century, it was often associated with sailors and manual workers, but it was during the 19th and 20th centuries that denim was really put on the fashion map. It became synonymous with ranchers and cowboys of America’s Midwest, and stars of the silver screen such as Marlon Brando and James Dean, who adopted denim as a symbol of insouciant cool in the 1950s. Over the ensuing decades, denim became the uniform of bohemian artists and punk rockers alike, with the rugged, ultra-wearable fabric becoming a rebellious staple on ready-to-wear runways, too, where it has been slashed, distressed, dyed and embellished in myriad ways ever since.
Why the history lesson? Because understanding denim’s legacy is crucial to optimizing its place and power within your wardrobe. Its connotations of industrialist, understated swagger can bring quiet confidence to almost any outfit, and never more so than when paired with its polar opposite – sparkling, ultra-precious diamonds. Denim, however, shouldn’t be reserved for downtime only. For 2026, cool and contemporary designers are harnessing its ultra-versatile potential more than ever before, in tandem with the evolution of modern fine-jewelry makers, who are championing the effortless ease of everyday diamonds.
While we may mostly associate denim with weekend-wear, hybrid pieces such as Agolde’s ‘Vana’ jeans from our NET SUSTAIN edit feel elevated enough to wear to work, especially when paired with a white shirt and Frame’s ‘The Curve’ jacket. Choose eye-catching diamonds set in yellow gold, such as Jennifer Meyer’s diamond-encrusted ‘Evil Eye’ bracelet or Marie Lichtenberg’s rivière necklace, which will contrast beautifully with dark-blue shades of denim – the perfect canvas to amplify their high shine.
Light-washed denim, such as Nili Lotan’s barrel-leg ‘Otis’ jeans, will also complement cool-toned metals, such as silver and white gold. For a new take on double denim, pair them with white or indigo denim, and embellish the look with modern reinterpretations of jewelry-box staples, such as David Morris’s spiral-shaped hoop earrings or Suzanne Kalan’s dazzling ‘Bolero’ necklace. Inspired by Western bolero ties, the piece sparkles with baguette-cut diamonds in the brand’s signature ‘Firework’ setting.
While indigo denim is polished enough for evening, it often needs a few show-stopping jewels to really make an impact – especially in low-lit settings. The next time you’re out for dinner, wear Loewe’s asymmetric shirt and the matching wide-leg jeans with kitten heels and diamonds stacked with abandon – Sophie Bille Brahe’s jaw-grazing drop earrings will sit perfectly alongside a slew of mixed-metal tone hoops and studs.
Purists may want to stick to denim worn with bright white diamonds alone, but when it comes to denim styling, there really are no rules – connoisseurs may choose to splurge on rare colored diamonds or choose semi-precious gems to add similarly saccharine scintillation. This is a look you can get as playful as you wish with.
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The model featured in this story is not associated with NET-A-PORTER and does not endorse it or the products shown