


She polishes up real nice.
Taylor Swift announced her Target-exclusive “The Life of a Showgirl: The Crowd Is Your King” vinyl on Instagram Wednesday — and in the accompanying album artwork, she sports a ring that shines even brighter than the Las Vegas lights.
Designed by family-owned fine jewelry house Kallati and priced at $27,120, the superstar’s 14-karat rose-gold sparkler is set with a show-stopping 35-carat pink sapphire framed by smaller diamonds totaling 1 carat.
The dazzling piece matches Swift’s blush velvet bodysuit — plucked from The Blonds’ Elizabeth Taylor-themed fall 2023 collection, as exclusively reported by Page Six Style — and complements the supersized 3D jewel motif on the front of the corseted design.
The late “Butterfield 8” actress and jewelry collector, after whom Swift named one of her “Showgirl” tracks, would surely adore the songstress’ gobstopper-sized pink gem.
Of course, this isn’t the only headline-making ring Swift’s shown off lately. Last month, Travis Kelce popped the question with a stunning old mine brilliant-cut engagement ring crafted by jeweler Kindred Lubeck of Artifex Fine in collaboration with the Chiefs tight end himself, as we exclusively reported.
Other standout styles seen in Swift’s “Life of a Showgirl” album artwork include several other looks from The Blonds — including a playful pink feathered corset and a crystal-encrusted maroon bodysuit paired with matching flame-inspired opera gloves — along with a number of archival Bob Mackie and Pete Menefee designs from the iconic, long-running Las Vegas show “Jubilee!”
“They were built with the best of the best,” Sin City stylist (and onetime “Jubilee!” dresser) Jose Rodrigo previously told us of the revue’s sparkling costumes, which he’s pulled for burlesque performer Dita Von Teese’s residencies and the 2024 Pamela Anderson film “The Last Showgirl.”
“Everything was really, truly thoughtful, and the way that [Swift] wears everything — the way that it was styled — is, I think, true to the original. There’s still that reverence to the original design.”