A round magnetic brooch in silver-tone metal with an openwork garden scene inside the 5 cm frame: a royal-blue enamel flower with eight crystal-blue rhinestone stamens, a small cluster of pale-blue crystals as a second flower, a pearly blue faceted butterfly, three grey marbled enamel leaves and a single blue rhinestone. Hidden two-disc magnetic fastening, no pin and no holes. A spring-garden lapel accent for a blazer, knit jumper or wool coat.
This brooch frames a small garden scene inside a 5 cm silver-tone circle: a royal-blue enamel flower in the upper left with eight pale-blue rhinestones as stamens at its centre, a small cluster of five pale-blue crystals as a smaller flower beside it, a pearly blue faceted butterfly in the lower right with two pairs of wings in a layered crystal cut, and three grey marbled enamel leaves arranged around the composition with a tree-like stem. A single blue rhinestone sits low on the frame to balance the scene. The openwork circle keeps the brooch light despite the visual density inside it, and the hidden two-disc magnetic fastening on the back means the brooch holds on a wool coat or a silk blouse without ever leaving a pinhole.
Most flower brooches drift into busy clusters: ten petals, several leaves, a stack of stones, all competing for attention. This piece puts the whole garden inside a 5 cm circle and lets the silver-tone frame do the heavy lifting. The eye reads the circle first, then the flower, then the butterfly, then the small crystal cluster, and stops. The leaves stay grey rather than green specifically to keep the blue palette dominant. The magnetic fastening matters here because the openwork frame and the layered cabochons make the brooch heavier than a flat enamel piece, and a coarse pin would pull on fine fabric. Browse our wider no-pin magnetic brooches for the same fastening on other designs.
On a navy or grey wool coat, the silver frame stays neutral and the royal-blue flower becomes the colour anchor. On a chambray shirt or denim jacket, the blue-on-blue mood reads tonal rather than matchy. On a cream knit, the openwork frame catches negative space and makes the brooch feel less heavy. Pair it with smaller pieces from our wider flower brooch collection for a coordinated lapel garden.
Frame in silver-tone metal, baked enamel for the royal-blue flower petals and the grey marbled leaves, pale-blue crystals mounted in claw settings, pearly blue resin for the butterfly wings. Two-piece set: the decorative brooch and a small openwork magnetic disc placed behind the fabric. Wipe the front with a dry microfibre cloth, store flat, keep perfume sprays and pool water off the enamel.
| Dimensions | 5 cm diameter |
|---|---|
| Materials | Silver-tone metal, baked enamel, pale-blue crystals, pearly resin |
| Colours | Royal blue, pale blue, pearly blue, marbled grey, silver |
| Fastening | Magnetic, two-piece, no pin |
| Best worn on | Wool coat, blazer, denim, knit, scarf, tote |
Baked enamel with a marbled grey effect that imitates natural stone. The look is more durable and lighter than a real cabochon.
Yes. The two rare-earth discs are sized for wool coats and structured blazers without slipping, and remain gentle enough for silk or fine knit.
Year-round. The blue palette reads spring-summer at first glance, but the silver frame and grey leaves keep the brooch grown-up enough for autumn-winter coats.