Sabyasachi Presents High Jewellery Collection in exclusive Summer Residency In the Penthouse Suite at Harrods
- alexh363
- Jul 3
- 3 min read
Sabyasachi High Jewellery will be exclusively available at Harrods from 21st to 27th July 2025, during the inaugural collaboration between the legendary Indian design house and the storied British luxury emporium. Ensconced in the private Penthouse Suite on the seventh floor of the iconic Knightsbridge flagship, Sabyasachi will showcase an exceptional High Jewellery collection, curated uniquely for Harrods. Launching in line with Harrods High Jewellery Exhibition from Monday 21st- Sunday 3rd August, Sabyasachi will join some of the most notable jewellery houses under the roof the luxury emporium.

Since its inception, Sabyasachi has created a new language in jewellery; one rooted in heritage Indian craft and goldsmithing traditions of North Calcutta, which challenges the reverence of stones and assumptions of value. As designer Sabyasachi Mukherjee stated, “My two decades as a colourist guides me as a jeweller, especially when working with multi-coloured gemstones. For me, the quality of gemstones is a given, but the beauty of jewellery-making is in disrupting the hierarchy of precious stones and mixing them in a fierce amalgamation of modernity and traditionalism.”
The Sabyasachi Jewellery X Harrods Collection distils the most exemplary pieces from each of the brand’s core languages: Bengal Royale and Bengal Byzantine Broadway.
BENGAL ROYALE: IN North Calcutta, the 1920s was a time of rebellion, an age of conflict and passion, where writers, poets, artists, royals and freedom fighters collided in society. Between dusty Venetian chandeliers and weathered terrazzo floors beauty in words, art, architecture, clothing, and jewellery became true pleasure. It was an expansive time for jewellery making in India—European techniques met with Mughal heritage and Bengali filigree craftsmanship. With echoes crossing the Georgian age to the Belle Époque, The Bengal Royale collection is Sabyasachi’s ode to an era of iconic thought, craftsmanship and sartorial brilliance.
BENGAL BYZANTINE BROADWAY: Mingling the master craftsmanship of Bengal with gilded Byzantine magnificence and the theatrical power of the modern world, a cultural savoir faire crosses the new silk route—a journey from Calcutta westward. Each piece creates a curious contemporary dialogue between legacy and perspective. A celebration of Art Deco geometry, tropical whimsy, and heritage Indian embroideries that showcases the fine gold-smithing of the Babus of Bengal. The Bengal Byzantine Broadway collection interlaces the East and West, traditional and rebellious, the precious and profane, and the sensorial with the intellectual.
“I am honoured to present Sabyasachi High Jewellery at Harrods in London, the epicentre of taste and sophistication which showcases the pinnacle of the world’s finery. This residency will bring the best of Indian craftmanship and design to the unparalleled, global clients of Harrods. Together we will delight the senses of the world’s most discerning and uncompromising customers.” Sabyasachi Mukherjee
ENDS
ABOUT SABYASACHI
Founded in Calcutta, India in 1999, Sabyasachi is India’s leading luxury house rooted in heritage, craft and culture. A lifestyle brand that celebrates slow, authentic production, the handmade, and the finest of Indian craftsmanship and materials. Sabyasachi revels in India’s legacy while pushing a uniquely modern perspective; rooted in tradition but capturing the zeitgeist with a single-minded vision of creating modern heirlooms.
A market pioneer, Sabyasachi is the first Indian designer to collaborate with major international brands including Estée Lauder, Christian Louboutin, Morgenthal Frederics, L’Oréal, H&M, and Disney.
With an established retail footprint across major cities in India, and the first international flagship in New York City, Sabyasachi has created a global dialogue bringing together slow luxury, fine Indian craft, and the discerning customers who seek value and authenticity.
“For culture to be relevant, it needs to be dynamic.” - Sabyasachi Mukherjee