Wine blue dress + earrings = these combos never fail:
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Diamond studs — clean, sharp, icy balance.
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Pearl drops — vintage grace.
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Gold hoops — warmth and boldness.
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Sapphire danglers — blue layered with more blue.
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Garnet accents — red clash against the wine tone.
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Emerald earrings — regal contrast.
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Crystal chandeliers — full drama.
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Rose gold teardrops — soft romantic glow.
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Minimalist ear climbers — modern edge.
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Vintage rhinestones — retro glam gamble.
Messy little comparison up front
Wine blue is heavy, velvet-like even if it’s cotton. It absorbs light instead of spitting it back. Earrings have to either break through that richness (diamonds, crystals, gold) or play harmonies with it (sapphires, pearls, rose gold). Garnets clash in this deliberate way—blue with red, like wine swirling against midnight. Emeralds? Bold slice of green through the gloom. Rhinestones? Risky, but can scream disco chic.
I’ve worn wine blue with pearls and looked like I belonged in a 50s movie. I’ve worn it with gold hoops and looked like I was ready to start a fight—in the best way. It’s versatile if you’re brave.
1. Diamond Studs — Quiet Ice

Studs are easy. Always. They cut sharp light against the heavy backdrop of wine blue. I wore oversized studs once with a fitted wine blue gown—no necklace, just the studs. The light bounced like I had secrets. They’re not loud, they’re not new, but they’re unbeatable.
2. Pearl Drops — Soft Classic

Pearls do this weird magic thing. They calm a strong color down without making it dull. Drops especially—they swing gently, soften your face, and balance the deep blue. I wore pearl drops with an off-shoulder wine blue cocktail dress at a wedding. Someone told me I looked like “an old Hollywood painting.” Pearls just do that.
3. Gold Hoops — Fire Against Cool

Gold clashes with wine blue, and the clash works. Big chunky hoops feel bold, even brazen. Small hoops? More polished. I wore thick gold hoops once with a short wine blue dress and boots—felt like a troublemaker in the best way. The contrast is hot, literally.
4. Sapphire Danglers — Tone on Tone

Blue with blue could’ve gone flat, but sapphires against wine blue feel like layers, like shadows inside shadows. Danglers especially—they move, they sparkle, they keep the depth alive. I wore navy sapphire danglers with a dark wine dress once. It looked like moonlight rippling on water. Safe, yes, but not boring.
5. Garnet Accents — Wine Meets Wine

Red against wine blue? Risky. Garnet earrings feel like doubling down on the richness, leaning into the “wine” part of wine blue. I wore tiny garnet studs once with a velvet wine dress. People stared—not sure if it was approval or shock. That’s the point. It’s lush on lush. Almost overwhelming, but sometimes overwhelming is perfect.
6. Emerald Earrings — Regal Clash

Green cuts through wine blue like a blade. It feels regal, like “painted portraits in a castle” regal. I wore emerald teardrops with a fitted satin wine dress once. My reflection looked expensive. Emeralds don’t play subtle. They shout royalty.
7. Crystal Chandeliers — Light Explosion

Chandeliers with crystals are drama incarnate. Against wine blue, they look like fireflies against midnight. I wore long chandeliers with a strapless wine cocktail dress. The crystals caught every flicker of light in the room. Velvet-heavy dresses especially need this—movement, light, sparkle.
8. Rose Gold Teardrops — Warm Romance

Rose gold doesn’t scream. It glows. Teardrops in rose gold against wine blue add a romantic, tender softness. I wore rose gold earrings with a flowy wine dress once for a date. My date actually said, “You look like poetry.” (Cringe, but hey, he wasn’t wrong.) Rose gold whispers instead of yells.
9. Minimalist Ear Climbers — Modern Bite

Ear climbers feel edgy, modern, almost futuristic. Against wine blue, they don’t overpower, but they add interest. I wore crystal climbers with a high-neck wine dress once. Everyone thought it was “avant-garde.” It wasn’t—it was just me too lazy to find a necklace. Climbers carry a quiet strength.
10. Vintage Rhinestones — Retro Risk

Rhinestones can go tacky real fast. But vintage rhinestone earrings, the chunky glamorous kind, can make a wine blue dress look like pure retro luxury. I wore oversized rhinestones once with a velvet wine gown and messy hair. Did I look subtle? Absolutely not. Did I look unforgettable? Yeah. Rhinestones gamble between disaster and brilliance—and that’s why they’re fun.
Crooked closing thoughts (because neat endings are fake)
Wine blue is rich. It’s moody. It already sets the stage. Earrings either slice light into it or deepen the story. Diamonds are ice. Pearls are cream. Gold is fire. Sapphires echo. Garnets clash. Emeralds reign. Crystals sparkle. Rose gold glows. Climbers edge. Rhinestones gamble.
I honestly think wine blue is forgiving. You can throw on half the wrong earrings and it’ll still look like a choice. I once wore mismatched studs—a diamond in one ear, a garnet in the other—with a wine dress. People thought it was intentional, “artsy.” Truth? I couldn’t find the pair. That’s the trick: own it, and no one will question it.