
For a Tiffany & Co. promo in April 2026, Matilda De Angelis posed in an oversized black blazer with gold jewelry—restrained, sharp, and the chain details are the real story.
The first thing I noticed in this photoshoot wasn’t even the blazer. It was the jewelry placement—clean, deliberate, and very Tiffany & Co. in how it pulls your eye up to the collarbone and ears.
Matilda De Angelis is shot leaning against a stone wall in an oversized black blazer layered over a black scoop-neck top. The tailoring feels intentionally roomy through the shoulders with a slightly dropped, rounded line at the sleeve head, and the lapels sit wide and flat (no fussy shaping, just a strong frame). And the styling stays monochrome all the way down in what looks like black trousers—classic, minimal, and kind of unshakeable.
Now, the shine. She’s wearing chunky gold link earrings, a short gold chain necklace with mixed link shapes, plus a gold bracelet and what looks like a watch with a pale, square face. There are rings too, including a delicate band that catches the light when her hand relaxes. Small detail, big effect.
But I’m split on one thing: the blazer is so oversized that it almost swallows the jewelry’s scale in the midsection, especially with her arms crossed. Then again, maybe that’s the point—jewels first, outfit second, and the PR team definitely isn’t mad about it.
And if you’ve been looking at celebrity photos lately, you’ve probably clocked how many brands are leaning on this same formula right now: black tailoring, bare skin at the neckline, gold hardware, no distractions. Is it getting predictable? A little. Does it still look expensive? Yeah.
Quiet power, loud links.



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