
Parker Posey made her Emmys red carpet debut in a lavender Valentino gown.
Emeralds Steal the Emmys Spotlight
At the 2025 Emmys, actress Parker Posey turned heads with a striking emerald necklace—rich green stones that shimmered under the lights. The piece, large, bold, and exquisitely set, echoed timeless Art Deco elegance, paired with minimalist gowns that let the jewelry speak.
Beauty, Glamour—and Ethics?
Such pieces often come with more than aesthetic power. In today’s jewelry world, consumers care deeply not just about how a necklace looks, but where those emeralds come from, if the metals are sourced responsibly, and whether artisans were treated fairly. Is this necklace purely statement style, or could it represent a shift toward ethical jewelry values in celebrity fashion?

Her necklace alone features a 45-carat pear-shaped emerald, plus 50 carats of aquamarine and diamonds.
Emeralds vs Alternatives
Emeralds are beloved for their vibrant hue—but they can be pricey, often treated or enhanced. Alternatives like lab-grown emeralds or sustainable gemstones are gaining traction, offering similar visual impact with lower environmental cost and greater traceability. Will more stars lean into those alternatives?

Posey played the often-memed Victoria Ratliff in Season 3 of “The White Lotus.”
Legacy, Image, and Influence
Fashion moments at red carpet events ripple outward. When someone of Parker Posey’s stature wears bold gemstones, it amplifies interest in emerald styles, shapes, designers. But for this influence to align with enduring value, it must not stop at design: origin, certification, sustainability—all part of modern luxury conversation. lab-grown diamonds are part of that shift toward transparency across jewelry categories.

Posey is nominated for outstanding actress in a drama series for “The White Lotus.”
My Take
Glamour and bold stone colors will always have their place, but if celebrity jewelry styling leans into ethics—visible provenance, sustainable design, maybe even choosing lab-grown or recycled—then light from the red carpet can also shine on values, not just sparkle.