Nothing ruins a getting-ready moment faster than pulling a knotted ball of necklaces out of your bag twenty minutes before photos. This is the plain, do-it-in-order way to pack your wedding jewelry so it arrives exactly how you put it in. It's for anyone traveling to a wedding, whether you're the bride, a bridesmaid, or a guest with one very good pair of earrings you cannot lose.
The single best trick, and the one worth reading twice: run the chain of every delicate necklace through a plastic drinking straw, then clasp it closed. The straw holds the chain straight so it physically cannot knot itself. For longer chains, use a paper straw or cut a bubble tea straw to size. This costs nothing and it's the difference between a five-second untangle and a fifteen-minute one with a safety pin at the worst possible time.
If a necklace is too thick for a straw, clasp it and thread it through the arm of a pair of sunglasses, or lay it flat on a strip of plastic wrap and roll it up tight. The whole goal is the same. A chain that can't move can't tangle.
Jewelry tangles and scratches when pieces touch each other, so the fix is simple: keep them apart. A pill organizer works beautifully for stud earrings and small rings, one pair or one ring per slot, snapped shut. For larger statement earrings, press the posts through a small square of felt or a folded piece of soft fabric so they stay paired and the backs don't wander off.
If you carry your rings, thread them onto a ribbon or a short length of yarn and tie it in a loose bow. They'll stay in order and can't roll into a corner of your bag. Bracelets and bangles do best wrapped individually in tissue, then tucked so they aren't stacked directly on top of each other, especially if you're mixing metals or anything with stones.
Not all jewelry is as tough as it looks. Pearls, opals, and softer gold pieces scratch easily against harder stones and against each other. Wrap each of these separately in a soft cloth or a fold of tissue before it goes anywhere near the rest of your things. Pearls in particular are delicate and react to heat, sweat, and pressure, which is worth remembering if you're traveling in summer 2026 heat and your bag is sitting in a warm car. The Gemological Institute of America's guidance on pearl care is a good, plain read if you want to understand why they need the extra layer.
Cubic zirconia, crystal, and rhinestone pieces are usually glued rather than set, so pressure and jostling can loosen a stone. Keep those flat and cushioned, not crammed.
If you're flying, your jewelry travels with you, not in a checked bag. This is not about theft as much as it's about control. Checked bags get thrown, stacked, and occasionally lost, and you cannot replace a family heirloom or the earrings that match your dress on the morning of the wedding. Slip your organized pieces into a small zip pouch and keep it in your personal item where you can put your hand on it.
The same logic applies to a road trip. The jewelry rides with you in the front, in a small case, not buried at the bottom of a duffel in the trunk where it can shift for the entire drive.
This is the part people skip and regret. In the same pouch as your jewelry, tuck a handful of extra earring backs, a couple of safety pins, and one small clear bag for anything that comes loose. Earring backs are the first thing to disappear and the hardest thing to find in an unfamiliar hotel room. If you wear anything with a lobster clasp that's tricky to close one-handed, a clasp helper or even a small paperclip can save you when you're getting ready without help.
If a piece is truly irreplaceable, snap a quick photo of it before you pack. It's a small thing, but if it goes missing, you'll be glad you have it.
Once you arrive, unpack the jewelry first and lay everything out on a flat surface, ideally on top of a hand towel so nothing rolls off the bathroom counter. Check that every pair is complete, every clasp works, and every back is where it should be. Doing this the night before means any missing earring back or stuck clasp becomes a calm errand instead of a morning-of scramble.
Lay the pieces out in the order you'll put them on, and set aside anything you're wearing during getting-ready photos so you're not digging for it later. The morning of a wedding moves fast enough. Your jewelry should be the one thing that's already handled.
Straws stop tangles, separate compartments stop scratches, soft wrapping protects anything delicate, and the whole pouch stays with you in your carry-on. Pack your backup earring backs alongside the jewelry, lay it all out the night before, and you'll walk into the wedding with everything intact and nothing to fix.
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Confête is a women's fashion boutique positioning itself as a "one-stop shop" for life's special moments, specializing in event and occasion wear.
Portland, Oregon
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