LIÉ Studio has built its reputation on jewelry that balances weight and delicacy — chunky gold chains with hollow cores, sculptural ear cuffs that read as modern armor, signet rings engraved with the brand’s crescent-moon motif. Founded by designer Rachel Lee in 2018, the Los Angeles-based label has cultivated a following among women who want their accessories to carry a sense of permanence without tipping into heaviness. This month, LIÉ Studio translates that sensibility into its first non-jewelry category: eyewear.
The Pre-Fall 2026 sunglass collection comprises three styles — the Leo, the Matteo, and the Robyn — each named for figures in Lee’s creative orbit. The Leo is a navigator frame with a keyhole bridge and a slightly upswept brow, executed in Mazzucchelli acetate from Italy’s famed manufacturer. The Matteo takes a geometric approach: a hexagonal silhouette with sharp angles that soften against the face through a contoured nose pad. The Robyn, the most adventurous of the three, features a cat-eye shape with a double-bridge detail that references the layered chains in LIÉ’s jewelry line.
The move into eyewear is a common trajectory for independent jewelry brands — think models who start with necklaces and graduate to watches — but it carries particular significance for LIÉ Studio. The brand’s jewelry is defined by its relationship to the body: how it sits against the collarbone, how it catches the light when the wearer turns her head. Sunglasses demand a different kind of anatomical attention — they must conform to the architecture of the face, the bridge of the nose, the temple curve behind the ear — and Lee has invested the design process with the same precision she applies to her metalwork.
The launch also reflects a broader category trend: independent accessories brands are increasingly expanding beyond their core specialization, betting that a loyal customer will trust the label’s eye in adjacent categories. For LIÉ Studio’s customer — a woman who has already bought into the brand’s crescent-moon language — the jump from necklace to sunglass feels less like an expansion than a completion. The frames borrow their visual vocabulary from the jewelry line: the same warm golds, the same interplay between weight and air, the same sense that each object has been considered from every angle before it reaches the hand.


