Swarovski Imber is a jewellery collection from Swarovski, the Austrian crystal house founded in 1895 by Daniel Swarovski, whose precision-cut crystals became the global benchmark for faceted crystal used in fashion and fine accessories. The Imber line sits within Swarovski's broader jewellery offer and is designed for women, spanning necklaces, bracelets, and stud earrings finished in gold and silver tones.
What defines the Swarovski Imber collection
Imber pieces centre on Swarovski's signature crystal stones set in metal-plated settings. The collection is consistent in its focus: crystal is the primary design element rather than an accent, and the pieces are built around geometric or radiant-cut forms that catch light from multiple angles. If you are drawn to crystal-forward jewellery rather than understated metal work, Imber is a natural fit within the Swarovski range.
The collection covers the three most versatile jewellery categories — necklaces, earrings, and bracelets — which means it is straightforward to build a coordinated set. Gold-tone and silver-tone finishes are both represented, so matching to existing pieces or to a preferred metal tone is practical rather than a compromise.
Swarovski Imber in our selection
The Swarovski Imber pieces available here are priced from around €90 up to approximately €350, placing the collection in the accessible end of Swarovski's jewellery range. It is a small, focused selection, which makes it easy to review in full. If Imber's aesthetic appeals but you want to compare it against other Swarovski lines, collections such as Swarovski Meteora, Swarovski Mesmera, Swarovski Hyperbola, and Swarovski Constella each take a distinct design direction and are worth browsing alongside. The full Swarovski offer is on the Swarovski brand page.
Is Swarovski jewellery real crystal?
Yes. Swarovski crystals are a proprietary form of lead-free precision-cut glass, produced using a manufacturing process Daniel Swarovski patented in 1892. They are not gemstones, but they are genuine Swarovski crystal — not plastic or standard glass — and the cutting precision is what distinguishes them from mass-market costume jewellery.