Jewelry carries a level of trust few possessions ever earn. You do not lend it carelessly. You do not throw it in a drawer. When you pass it on, you say something with it: about who you are, where you came from, and who you want to remember. Jewelry is one of the few things people buy fully intending to outlive them.
Mayet De La Rosa Fine Jewelry has spent twenty years understanding that.
The brand recently marked two decades with an anniversary showcase, part fashion show, part retrospective, and part declaration of where it is headed next. The event, held before clients, partners, and members of the press, was elaborate by design: audiovisual presentations, a runway, and the unveiling of new collections. But beneath the production was something simpler and more durable: the story of a jewelry business that grew by doing one thing consistently well.

Four chapters
The centerpiece of the evening was a fashion presentation called “Legacy in Motion,” which organized the brand’s twenty years into four distinct collections, each corresponding to a different era in its history.
The first, Treasured Heirlooms, covered the brand’s early years: vintage-inspired settings, cameo jewelry, colored gemstones, and luminous pearls. These are the kind of pieces that do not follow trends because they predate them.
The second, Illusion of Light, marked the period when founder Mayet De La Rosa deepened her gemological education through the Gemological Institute of America, and the work began to show it. The diamond-centered designs from this era have a technical confidence that the earlier collections were still reaching toward.
Bold in Gold, the third chapter running from 2016 to 2020, is the one that tells you the most about the brand’s character. This was the pandemic era, when most businesses contracted. Mayet De La Rosa expanded its gold offerings, developed Japan gold creations, and held its customer relationships. It is easy, in retrospect, to call that resilience. At the time, it was probably just stubbornness and care.
The fourth collection, Future Facets, brought the story current: fancy-cut diamonds, a Monaco Collection, international partnerships, and 24K gold bars, the kind of investment-grade product that signals a brand thinking beyond the transaction and toward the long-term needs of its clientele.

An unexpected turn
The evening also introduced something new: Mayet De La Rosa Fine Fragrances.
Ten scents in total, five for women and five for men, were presented on a separate all-white runway, each fragrance paired with fashion designed to complement rather than compete with it. Pineapple Oud, Blushing Rose, Roma Noir, Imperial Silver. The names alone tell you the brand is not playing it safe.
The move into fragrance is a familiar one for luxury houses that have built genuine equity in a category and want to extend it. But it is a move that only works when the original reputation is solid enough to carry the expansion. Twenty years of jewelry is solid enough.

The designer
Bringing both collections to life on the runway was fashion designer Norman Malagueño Acuba, whose work has shown in Japan, Milan, London, New York, and Paris, and whose face has appeared on a Times Square billboard, the kind of credential that lands differently when you say it out loud.
Acuba is also currently the Local Director for Miss Universe Philippines – Cavite, which means he understands, professionally and practically, how clothing and adornment work together to tell a story about a person.
For this show, the brief was specific: make the fashion serve the jewelry, not the other way around. The silhouettes, serpentine, flowing, and bespoke, were built to let the pieces speak. The colors moved through the brand’s history, each hue meant to correspond to a chapter, a milestone, and a shade of what the company had become.

What 20 years mean
In Philippine retail, twenty years is not a small thing. It means surviving multiple economic contractions, a global pandemic, the shift toward online commerce, and the ongoing question of how a luxury brand stays relevant without cheapening what made it worth trusting in the first place.
Mayet De La Rosa Fine Jewelry’s answer, across all four of its chapters, has been consistency over cleverness. The work got more sophisticated, the diamonds more precisely set, the gold more substantial, and the collections more internationally minded, but the underlying commitment did not change: craftsmanship, authenticity, and the idea that what you buy here is worth keeping.
That is, ultimately, what the anniversary show was saying. Not that the brand has arrived, but that it intends to keep going: into fragrances, into investment metals, and into whatever the next twenty years ask of it.
The finest treasures, the brand has always believed, are the ones that endure.
Twenty years in, they are still proving it.

