Boucheron: Where Heritage Meets Wilderness in the Untamed Nature 2025 Collection
- Uber Digital Luxury press

- Sep 28, 2025
- 2 min read
Updated: Dec 14, 2025

Founded in 1858 under the ivy-clad arcades of Palais-Royal, Boucheron has long treasured the untamed elegance of the natural world. Eschewing grandiose florals, founder Frédéric Boucheron found inspiration in underappreciated beauty—wild thistles, curled ivy, delicate insects—rendering them with scientific precision and artistic passion.
Today, under the visionary hand of Creative Director Claire Choisne, Boucheron reanimates that legacy in Untamed Nature—the latest chapter in its Histoire de Style series. This 2025 high-jewelry suite comprises 28 transformative creations, strikingly realized in white gold, diamond pavé, rock crystal, mother-of-pearl, and black lacquer.
The designs span two poetic realms: Plants and Fauna, where jewelry becomes living art—breathing, shifting, echoing the fluidity of nature. Necklaces morph into cascading brooches, hairpieces become brooches or earrings, and articulated forms sway like wind-blown stems.
Legendary motifs return: the sinuous Ivy (“Lierre”) adapts into bracelets, bodice trains, and brooches that coil with movement; the architectural Thistle (“Chardon”), rooted in an 1878 archive, becomes a torque necklace of lightness and bold realism, created over 1,110 hours.

The Airelles (Lingonberry) necklace defies expectation with removable stems that cascade or transform into delicate brooches—each iteration capturing a breath of wilderness in motion, the result of 3,600 hours of artisanal mastery.
Then there’s Avoine (Oat)—whimsical hair jewels that double as brooches, their delicate stems softly swaying with every move; Cyclamen earrings, designed with asymmetry and 101 rose-cut diamonds that shimmer like a flower in bloom.
Through Untamed Nature, Boucheron doesn’t just bring jewelry to life—it invites nature itself to take over the body. Each piece is a testament to the Maison’s fusion of heritage realism, multi-wear ingenuity, and wild, poetic freedom.
Courtesy: Boucheron





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