Get 20% off Purchases £60+
Ends: 1+ month
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Spending £75 to get a free bottle of tanning mist isn’t everybody’s idea of a well-rounded business model, but here we are. Welcome to Orelia, a jewellery brand that seems to understand at least one thing very well: most people like shiny objects and gifts that feel slightly more luxurious…Spending £75 to get a free bottle of tanning mist isn’t everybody’s idea of a well-rounded business model, but here…
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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Spending £75 to get a free bottle of tanning mist isn’t everybody’s idea of a well-rounded business model, but here we are. Welcome to Orelia, a jewellery brand that seems to understand at least one thing very well: most people like shiny objects and gifts that feel slightly more luxurious than they probably are. The site is filled with steady-handed takes on everyday jewellery - mostly gold-plated, sometimes Swarovski-encrusted, and often waterproof, because apparently, jewellery now needs to survive triathlons.
Let’s start with the new Côte D’Azur collection, a range that mixes necklaces, earrings, and bracelets in that breezy, midweek-beach-trip-that-never-happens aesthetic. There’s a lobster charm necklace (£32), starfish-studded three-row layering pieces (£35), and a reasonably cheerful set of huggie hoops encrusted with shell motifs (£28). These are 18k gold-plated pieces - not solid gold, naturally, which would require more commitment (and possibly a mortgage), but they deliver a low-gloss, summer-holiday vibe without breaking a sweat. Or your bank account.
The jewellery isn’t going to fool a metalsmith, but Orelia clearly isn’t trying to. Most pieces sit comfortably under the £35 mark, and for gold-plated accessories, that’s about right. This isn’t heirloom material. These are "I wore them to brunch, lost one in a cab, and didn’t panic" pieces. There’s a calm honesty to that.
Spend £75, and you'll get a free Bali Body Tanning Mist (worth £28.95), which is a decent bonus - understated faux tan for those not quite ready to surrender to an actual summer. Orelia also runs steady offers: 15% off if you subscribe to their newsletter, and 20% off for students and healthcare workers. If you’re neither, you’ll need to lean into the loyalty of repeat buying, or, more likely, cart stacking to hit that £75 threshold.
Shipping is about what you'd expect - UK deliveries trackable and free if your purchase is £40 or more, which most are once you add a necklace and a couple of huggies. Returns are free in the UK, though there seems to be the standard "unworn and in original packaging" clause that quietly punishes spontaneous gift givers.
Design-wise, Orelia hits that steady midpoint between accessible and unambitious. The faceted spinner necklace (£60) in the LUXE line is waterproof and engravable - two adjectives that don’t always go together, but somehow work here. The LUXE line itself edges into more grown-up territory, often using recycled materials or sterling silver plating, but still comfortably under triple digits.
The brand also offers "ear stacking sets," like a £28 lightning and star pair set that is either whimsical or mildly chaotic, depending on your age and caffeine intake. Clip-on earrings, birthstone trinkets, and engraved initials round out a catalogue that feels algorithmically optimised for birthdays and bridal showers.
Will any of these pieces inspire gasps in a boardroom or art gallery? Probably not. But as everyday jewellery designed to pair with supermarket flowers or a last-minute party dress, they’re serviceable - even quietly charming.
Orelia isn’t redefining the jewellery space, and to its credit, it doesn’t pretend to. The site is easy to navigate, the jewellery is comfortably trend-adjacent, and the offers, while not jaw-dropping, are frequent enough to keep things interesting. It’s the sort of place you land when you need a gift, don’t want to spend too much, and forgot that birthdays happen every year. Think of it as Zara for your earlobes: fashionable enough, not emotionally destructive to your finances, and quietly pleased with itself.
And about that tanning mist? It, too, is fine. A mildly coconut-scented reminder that you spent £75 on waterproof earrings. Which, in this economy, might actually not be the worst idea.
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⭐ Rating: 3.6 / 5 (60 votes)