There is a particular shade of blue that only exists when it is set into something that has been engineered to catch light from several directions at once. On Afra Saraçoglu, Bvlgari’s Divas’ Dream jewelry leans into that optical game, placing tanzanites, blue sapphires, malachite accents and pavé diamonds into a composition that nods to Roman mosaic work without turning into costume.
Bvlgari Divas’ Dream jewelry, through Afra Saraçoglu



The campaign language is direct about its reference point: Roman mosaics. That matters, because the Divas’ Dream motif has always been about architecture as much as ornament, the fan like curve often linked to the scalloped forms you see around ancient Roman baths and floor patterns. In this iteration, the story is told in color first, then in outline. The necklace and earrings described here are built around luminous blues, punctuated with green malachite and the precise glitter of pavé diamonds, so the eye keeps moving rather than settling on a single hero stone.
Saraçoglu’s presence helps. She wears the piece with the calm focus of a true ambassador, letting the jewelry do the speaking, then stepping back in just enough for you to notice the way the stones shift tone under different angles of light. It is, in the most literal sense, a set designed for looking twice.
Why the Roman mosaic reference still works in 2026
Plenty of houses borrow antiquity as a mood board, but Bvlgari has the advantage of geography and habit. Rome is not an abstract idea for the brand, it is the city that keeps returning in its design vocabulary, whether through voluminous curves, chromatic pairings, or a willingness to mix hard stone with high sparkle in the same breath. Divas’ Dream jewelry is one of the clearest expressions of that instinct because it translates a historical pattern language into pieces that sit close to the body and perform under modern lighting.
That is also why the stone choice feels considered. Tanzanite and sapphire deliver blue with different temperatures, one often reading more violet, the other more classical, while malachite brings a graphic striation that behaves almost like a tesserae line in miniature. Pavé diamonds, meanwhile, work as the cementing shimmer around those blocks of saturated color.
What to look for, beyond the gemstones
Start with the silhouette. Divas’ Dream is at its best when the fan motif is legible from a few steps away, then resolves into small technical decisions up close, the setting work, the transitions between stones, the way pavé is used to sharpen edges instead of flooding the entire surface. That balance is what keeps the Roman reference from turning literal.
Where Divas’ Dream sits in Bvlgari’s broader jewelry language
If you follow the house, you know Bvlgari Divas’ Dream jewelry is often the line that converts new clients, partly because the motif is recognizable without being a logo, and partly because it allows for playful stone combinations that still feel anchored in a house code. This particular mix, tanzanite, blue sapphire, malachite, diamonds, lands closer to a high color register than the all diamond versions, and it suits a moment when statement jewelry is returning to red carpets and front rows as a deliberate styling choice.
For more on how legacy maisons are rethinking gemstone color in 2026, see our latest Luxury stories. And if you are watching how celebrity ambassadors are reshaping brand language, you may want to browse Best’s Celebrity coverage.
For official visuals and campaign context, Bvlgari’s own channels remain the cleanest point of reference, including the brand’s homepage at bulgari.com and Bvlgari’s verified Instagram presence, where the Afra Saraçoglu ambassador imagery appears under the #advBVLGARI tag: @bulgari.
Photo Credits
Images courtesy of their respective owners.











