Accessories

Timothée Chalamet in a custom candy necklace by Cartier is the sweet treat you need to see

By Kerry McDermott

Photo: Julian Ungano for Cartier

It took 450 hours for Cartier to complete Chalamet's custom candy-inspired necklace for the Wonka premier – a feat well worth the time considering the actor looked absolutely delectable

“Invention,” Gene Wilder’s Willy Wonka famously said in the classic 1971 film, is “93 per cent perspiration, six per cent electricity, four per cent evaporation, and two per cent butterscotch ripple”. Now that the chocolate factory is under the purview of a new Wonka, the always fabulously dressed Timothée Chalamet, that recipe looks rather different – if no less fantastical. Formulating his latest internet-shaking red-carpet look, for example, called for one historic Parisian jewellery maison, a sprinkling of vintage references and 450 hours of painstaking work.

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The result? The one-of-a-kind, candy-inspired Cartier necklace the modern day matinée idol wore to walk the red carpet at the world premiere of Wonka at London’s Royal Festival Hall tonight. “It’s insane, right?” Chalamet says admiringly of his new accessory, which was fitted precisely to the contours of his throat in order to sit directly against the skin, allowing all 964 of its emeralds, rubellites, pink tourmalines and blue opals to shine. “It’s beyond anything I could have dreamt,” the 27-year-old tells Vogue a day before the screening.

Photo: Julian Ungano for Cartier

Photo: Julian Ungano for Cartier

Chalamet, a house ambassador who has been known to wear metallic Tom Ford tailoring with a classic Juste un Clou bracelet, or board shorts with a vintage Tank watch, spent hours combing through archive Cartier imagery before travelling to Paris to meet with Marie-Laure Cérède, creative director of jewellery and watchmaking, at the atelier months before the premiere. “It seems like there was a really expressive period in the ’60s and ’70s when Cartier creations were quite colourful, and really playful, even,” he says of what he took away from his research. “The house has such success with their staples… my one curiosity was what something joyful and playful and youthful would look like under the umbrella of a Cartier creation.” For Cérède, the challenge was to create a unique piece that “fits Timothée”, but was simultaneously “so Cartier that it couldn’t have been done by anyone else”, she explains.

The necklace’s intense pink, vibrant green and milky blue stones certainly reflect Chalamet’s joyful brief, and set the piece apart from the more muted jewellery (a discreetly expensive watch here, a vintage brooch there) we traditionally see men wearing on the red carpet. But then, Timothée has never had any time for “rules” around what men and women should or shouldn’t be wearing. “Absolutely,” he replies emphatically, when I ask if he takes the same genderless approach to jewellery as he does to fashion generally. “Maybe it’s having gone to a performing arts high school in New York, or maybe it’s just the way my mom raised me,” he says. “I’ve always just worn what fits.”

It seems like there was a really expressive period in the ’60s and ’70s when Cartier creations were quite colourful, and really playful, even,

Timothée Chalamet

For Chalamet, as we know, “what fits” could extend to a backless Haider Ackermann jumpsuit, a Louis Vuitton harness or, most recently, a lilac Latex Prada suit. Still, the actor insists his tastes are often surprisingly simple. “I’ve always just loved a thin chain,” he says. “You know, even one of the necklaces I wear in Call Me By Your Name… the Star of David is obviously from the book, but another was one I just happened to have bought in Milan one weekend leading up to the movie. Luca [Guadagnino, the film’s director] kept it in.”

Photo: Julian Ungano for Cartier

That spontaneous purchase, since immortalised on screen in the film that made him one of Hollywood’s most bankable young stars, is now “tucked away at home”, says Chalamet, who adds that all of his most treasured pieces are those with memories attached. “I’ve always just loved jewellery with a meaning, whether that’s a wired bracelet from a special trip, or something intimate I would have received from a family member.” To the actor, “jewellery or fashion or anything you hold dear matters much more because of the sentiment behind it, or the feeling it gives you, than the price tag, or how sparkly it is.”

Timothée’s new Wonka necklace manages to be both sentimental and sparkly, given that it references perhaps his most major role to date, and combines a white gold base with close to 1,000 precious stones in a rainbow of sweetie shades. The distinctive colour combination – very pale blues mixed with strong pinks – is deliberately unexpected, Cérède explains. “It’s not very obviously harmonious,” she says. “It’s very [contrasting colours], which is quite audacious I think.”

Photo: Julian Ungano for Cartier

Photo: Julian Ungano for Cartier

Unlike the chain Chalamet wore as Elio in Call Me By Your Name, he won’t be tucking this one away in a drawer at home once his Wonka promo wraps: after tonight the spectacular piece will become part of the Cartier Collection, which goes on display at jewellery exhibitions around the globe. Of course, he could always put it on his Christmas list. While the maison declined to put an exact price tag on the necklace, his rumoured girlfriend Kylie Jenner is a self-made billionaire at 26 – and a fan of a Cartier Love bracelet herself.

But the actor insists he’s not holding out for any gifts in particular this year. “You know, Christmas is very close to my birthday on December 27th. I try to keep my expectations low.” Now that the laidback star is linked to a Kardashian-Jenner – a family that never misses an opportunity to commission an elaborate flower wall or balloon arch – he might just find himself surprised.


The creation of Timothée Chalamet's custom candy-inspired necklace

Chalamet with Cartier’s creative director of jewellery and watchmaking, Marie-Laure Cérède, in the atelier in Paris.

Chalamet with Cartier’s creative director of jewellery and watchmaking, Marie-Laure Cérède, in the atelier in Paris. Photo: Cartier/Julian Ungano

Taking a closer look at those precious stones: onyx, emeralds, pink tourmalines, rubellites and blue opals included.

Taking a closer look at those precious stones: onyx, emeralds, pink tourmalines, rubellites and blue opals included. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

Chalamet during one of two visits to the Cartier atelier in Paris.

Chalamet during one of two visits to the Cartier atelier in Paris. Photo: Cartier/Julian Ungano

The necklace, which incorporates 964 cabochon-cut precious stones, was fitted specifically to Chalamet. “We wanted to have something very fluid, very easy,” Cérède tells Vogue. “Like a second skin.”. Photo: Cartier/Julian Ungano

The actor told Vogue his most treasured jewellery holds sentimental value.

The actor told Vogue his most treasured jewellery holds sentimental value. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

Chalamet, a longtime friend of the house, has worn Cartier’s Tank watch and Trinity rings on the red carpet in the past.

Chalamet, a longtime friend of the house, has worn Cartier’s Tank watch and Trinity rings on the red carpet in the past. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

Chalamet made two visits to the atelier, where he was able to meet all of the skilled craftspeople who worked on the necklace.

Chalamet made two visits to the atelier, where he was able to meet all of the skilled craftspeople who worked on the necklace. Working on a bespoke piece of this nature is “a question of heart”, Cérède says. “It’s about intuition and emotion, and when you have all of these people working together, it creates something very magical and special.”. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

As likely to be spied in band tees and board shorts as Tom Ford tailoring, Chalamet says he is a fan of a “thin chain” when away from the red carpet.

As likely to be spied in band tees and board shorts as Tom Ford tailoring, Chalamet says he is a fan of a “thin chain” when away from the red carpet. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

The archive imagery Timothée brought with him to the atelier “immediately created inspiration for us”, says Cérède, who adds that the results are “very special, very unique”.

The archive imagery Timothée brought with him to the atelier “immediately created inspiration for us”, says Cérède, who adds that the results are “very special, very unique”. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

“It’s sleek, it’s uniform in some way but at the same time scattershot,” Chalamet says of the finished piece. “It’s wonderfully inspired by a variety of movements and feelings, the [same] way the film is.”

“It’s sleek, it’s uniform in some way but at the same time scattershot,” Chalamet says of the finished piece. “It’s wonderfully inspired by a variety of movements and feelings, the [same] way the film is.”. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

Fittingly, given the movie inspiration, the necklace echoes sweets, in that the stones are not faceted but cabochon cut, giving them a soft roundness.

Fittingly, given the movie inspiration, the necklace echoes sweets, in that the stones are not faceted but cabochon cut, giving them a soft roundness. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

“It’s like an uninterrupted visual landscape – it never ends,” Cérède says of the supple, almost “reptilian” Cartier necklace. “It’s a transportive creation, it’s magical and colourful but there is this hint of nostalgia.”

“It’s like an uninterrupted visual landscape – it never ends,” Cérède says of the supple, almost “reptilian” Cartier necklace. “It’s a transportive creation, it’s magical and colourful but there is this hint of nostalgia.”. Photo: Cartier/Alexis Armanet

The colourful stones were positioned by hand in an incremental, unplanned fashion, a process Cérède likened to painting, or “a meditation”.

The colourful stones were positioned by hand in an incremental, unplanned fashion, a process Cérède likened to painting, or “a meditation”. Photo: Cartier/Julien Thomas Hamon

The finished Cartier necklace, inspired by the “magical, colourful” world of Wonka.

The finished Cartier necklace, inspired by the “magical, colourful” world of Wonka. Photo: Cartier/Matthieu Lavanchy

Originally published on vogue.co.uk