Showing posts with label Gems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gems. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Aventurine

Aventurine has a unique and characteristic shimmer or glistening effect termed “aventurescence”. Aventurine is a form of quartz; platy mineral inclusions in it lend this gemstone its shimmer. It gets its name from an Italian word “ventura” meaning “by chance”. This dates back to 18th century when aventurine or goldstone was luckily discovered. Though it was a known fact that goldstone is not same aventurine.

This nature’s gift is green semi-translucent to mostly opaque with mica flecks. It is also found in silvery, yellow, reddish brown, greenish-brown, bluish green and orange. Aventurine’s physical properties vary because it’s a rock. Its hardness is somewhat lower than single-crystal quartz at around 6.5.

All good things are put to plenty of uses. It applies to aventurine as well. It has been used as landscape stone, building stone, aquaria, monuments, candelabra, girandoles, pipes, vases and bowls (sometimes very large); jewelry being one of the most important ones. Necklaces – beaded strings or knotted strings, multi-line garlands, earrings, finger-rings and bracelets… jewelry lovers’ fancies see no bounds. It looks fab in cabochon and bead format. Since it is cut into numerous shapes and the color choices it provides, lets the designers go wild with their imaginations. To add to its usefulness, aventurine is an easy-on-the-pocket stone, yet is extremely attractive. Its claim to fame is the inclusions that appear as sparkles. Here is a tip for aventurine lovers: translucent aventurine often fades in the sun, therefore the aventurine jewelry is better kept in dark places. Goldstone is often used as an imitation for aventurine. All avid aventurine buyers should buy this wonderful gemstone with a discerning eye.

Geographical places which have rich deposits are Brazil, India, China, Japan, Russia, Tanzania, and USA. Extensive beds in mica schist occur in the Russian Ural Mountains. Green aventurine, colored by chrome mica, has been found in the state of Tamil Nadu (India), China, and in Rutland (Vermont).

Aventurine is the anniversary gemstone for the 8th year of marriage. It is the star sign for Libra and the planetary stone of Taurus. Like most gemstones, Aventurine too is associated with a chakra. It aids the 4th chakra, the Heart. The Heart Chakra relates to love and emotional well-being, aids in the ability to love and attract those who are also able to love. Blockages of the 4th Chakra can cause indecisiveness, fear and anxiety. Common physical symptoms can include heart and lung ailments. This is why aventurine is called the "Healer of the Heart and the Soul." Because its benefits related to mental stress, heart and lungs and adrenal system, fevers, inflammation, nervous system stress and migraines, eye ailments, blood pressure abnormalities, hypertension and urogenital disorders, aventurine is considered to be an all-round healing stone. Gamblers exploit its healing properties to guard their risks and personally carry it on them as their lucky talisman.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, people specialized in the production of handmade glass in the ‘traditional Venetian style’. In fact, they adopted certain aspects of historical Venetian glass design and combined these to create new elaborate and fanciful shapes that have little in common with the original glasses that inspired them. Their products were particularly popular in Britain, where the public adored anything Venetian. Some goblets feature aventurine – small flat particles of copper dispersed randomly in the glass to create a sparkling effect. The technique of embedding canes of glass was also developed in Murano, in the 16th century and was called ‘filigrana’ (filigree) decoration, because of its similarity to goldsmiths’ work.

Aventurine is certainly a favorite with people with fancy for gemstone jewelry, artifacts, collectibles and healing crystals. Why not when this gemstone brings with it a splendid blend of beauty with power!

Friday, November 20, 2009

What is Amethyst



Amethyst, the violet variety of quartz, whose name has been derived from an Ancient Greek word a- ("not") and methustos ("intoxicated"), is as interesting a gemstone as its history. Dionysus, the Greek god of intoxication, was pursuing a maiden by the name of Amethystos. But it so happened that that maiden turned down his affections. To ensure this, she prayed to the gods to help her remain pure. Her wish was granted and she turned into a white stone. Dionysus was so deeply humbled by Amethystos’s desire to remain chaste that as an offering he poured wine over the stone and the white stone’s crystals turned purple. This is how amethyst is believed to have born.

Chemically speaking, amethyst is a result of mechanical stresses which results in superimposition of alternate lamellae of right-handed and left-handed quartz. It is a hard stone, with a hardness level of 7 on Mohs scale favoring its usage in jewelry. Not just for its luxuriant lilac to purple color, it is a loved-by-all gemstone in beaded necklaces or in plain necklace and other jewelry pieces, like bracelets, earrings, finger rings, etc.,.
Amethyst is found in shades ranging from light pinkish violet to rich purple. It may also give out red and blue secondary hues. The ideal grade is called "Deep Siberian" and has a primary purple hue of around 75–80 percent, 15–20 percent blue and (depending on the light source) red secondary hues.

The color of amethyst is more often than not irregularly distributed. To accommodate this patchyness, this stone is mostly cut as brilliant round cuts or beads to maximize the color. Other cuts can be used when the color is better distributed.

On one hand, amethyst has been known as an antidote to intoxication. However, on other hand, the royalty and richness exuded by its purple color gives a high which is unequaled. Amethyst has been used since the dawn of history to adorn the rich and powerful monarchs and rulers. Today, amethyst is a lovely and affordable gemstone that is fortunately available in a wide variety of cut and uncut stones that we can all possess and admire in form of necklaces, earrings, and other jewelry pieces, or in studded in murals, lavish paintings, etc.,.

Taking its intoxication aspect a little further, it was believed that Amethyst protected its owner and wearers from drunkenness. That’s why ancient Greek and Romans wore amethyst and made drinking vessels or wine goblets carved from it. Medieval Europeans had a tad different belief; they wore amethyst amulets for their protection in battles. Beads of amethyst were found in Anglo-Saxon graves in England. The Ancient Egyptians too had a diverse faith. They used Amethyst as a gemstone largely employed in antiquity for intaglio engraved gems.

Geographical names that find reference with amethyst are Minas Gerais in Brazil and South Korea where this lilac gemstone is found in abundance occurring as geodes within volcanic rocks. Mazatal Mountain region in Arizona is the only US location that currently mines fine quality gems that are sold in fine jewelry, while Maissau, Lower Austria takes all the luck to have the largest opencast amethyst vein. Zambia takes the cake as the world’s largest producer with an annual production. The highest grade amethyst is called "Deep Russian". It is exceptionally rare and therefore its value is dependent on the demand of collectors.

Here’s something interesting about amethyst locations: agate hollows of Brazil and Uruguay harbor crop of amethyst crystals in the interior. This corroborates similar origin of agates and amethysts.

Amethyst is the traditional birthstone for people born in February. It is also called Power Stone owing to its profuse healing properties. Take as a folklore, amethyst is considered as a dream stone and to aid insomnia. Sleep with an amethyst under your pillow to bring about pleasant dreams, or rub it across your forehead to offer relief from a headache. Many professionals of healing field consider amethyst as “nature’s tranquilizer” because of its effectiveness in relaxing not only the mind but also the nervous system. This purple gemstone is related to and found to heal and align ailments of the 6th and 7th Chakras, which are the Third Eye or Brow (6th) and the Crown (7th).

A gemstone with innumerable admirers from times immemorial is bound to integral part of collectibles and arty pieces from ancient times and preserved in museums. Your desire to own an amethyst masterpiece is not difficult to be realized. The Royal Worcester Porcelain Works in Englan houses tall, slender vases with slightly flared top rims, like the 1926 earthenware vase with a gorgeous amethyst glaze thrown in Bybee, Ky, in 1926, or the mottled green vase made by Leon and Charles Volkmar in 1910 for the Volkmar Kilns in Metuchen. They may not be ostentatious, but they are the real lesson Charles Cotton Dana was trying to teach.

Possess an amethyst beaded necklace or as an artifact, it will surely become your most prized possession.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Know about Agate gemstone





Agate stone

Agate, pronounced as agit, was christened by a Greek philosopher and a naturalist Theophrastus way back in between 4th and 3rd centuries BC when he first spotted agate on the banks of the river Achates in southwestern Sicily. Agate is an impure crystalline form of quartz defined by distinctness of grain and brightness of color.

Agates have an interesting history attached to them; they tell the story of Earth’s evolution. Creation of agate has an intriguing connection to volcanic eruptions that have been responsible to a great extent in shaping the Earth. Most of the agates have been known to have formed during ancient volcanic activities. The empty spaces or cavities formed by lava gave opportunity to silica rich water to enter to spell magic. When the silica in the solution travelled out, it formed silica crystals filling empty spaces from outside inwards. This is how agates acquired their characteristic and Nature’s most creative bands and cloudy patterns.

A logical corollary is that no two agates look alike. So much so that two stones cut from one single rock are dissimilar. Though most agates are related to volcanic rocks, some have their genesis in metamorphic rocks as well.

There will hardly be a color agate is not found in. There are black, grey, brown, yellow, pink, green, blue agates used for making jewelry, mortars, pestles, burnishers polishers and for healing purposes.

Agates are fairly resistant to weathering and remain as nodules in soil or as gravel in riversides. Though they’re found throughout the world, Brazil and Uruguay top the list of agate producing countries. Scottish agates are enviously second to none in their color and texture; they were often called “Scottish Pebbles” during nineteenth century due to their ready availability on Scottish seashores.

Agate gemstone is as mystical in its properties as it is magical in its appearance. It is the birthstone for September and also for sun sign Gemini. During ancient times, it was highly prized as talisman; it was often employed to protect against fever, divert storms and to even quench thirst. Collecting agate bowls was one fancy among European royalty during the Renaissance and many museums, including the Louvre.

Even in modern times, agates are used for rebalancing and harmonizing body, mind and spirit. It is known to dispel negativity while it cleanses and stabilizes aura. Agate belongs to Crown chakra. It heals eyes, stomach and uterus. White agate is often addressed as “the ultimate pregnancy stone” as it known to protect mother and baby, soothes labor pains, provides relief from morning sickness and ensures healthy lactation.
Knotted agate necklaces

The largest use of agate is for jewelry making. Fashionistas, pan-world, have a common desire to own at least one jewelry piece of agate. Why not when agate is surrounded by so much mystique! Knotted agate necklaces and beaded agate necklaces are very popular. Here is a word of advice for agate jewelry lovers: make sure you take care of this prized gemstone well. Agate easily gets chipped and cracked despite its hardness factor of 7.0. It is better to not wear agate jewelry while household chores. To clean it, gently wipe with a clean soft damp cloth, or with soapy water and soft brush to remove dust and grime. And yes, beware of imitation. Fake agate keep floating in the market, but be sure you either learn to tell authentic from fakes.

The splendid history and exquisiteness of agates gets its acknowledgment in museums like Montana Agate Museum Collection. Here 500 pieces of some of the best Montana Agate gathered and assembled from the last 75 years. The pieces are like handcrafted metal agate and Montana jewelry, polished specimens, sculpts, etc.,.

Agate, by all parameters, is the most gifted gemstone. Indeed other gemstones’ envy, Nature’s pride.

Some of the Museum Collection of Agates




Monday, November 16, 2009

Curiosities: Unusual Gemstones

There is more to life than diamonds! In fact, there is an array of gemstones that offer extraordinary beauty for jewels. It might be time to let your emeralds and pearls take a back seat in the jewelry box to make room for these dazzling and none­so­typical gems.

The range of gemstones is large too large for diamonds, sapphires, rubies, emeralds, and pearls to absorb all the attention. There are many more gemstones that exude great visual appeal. Some have gone in and out of fashion over the centuries. Some are simply too rare to generate considerable fanfare. This article explores some lesser known gemstones that are alternatively beautiful in their way and make for stunningly unusual jewels.

Watermelon tourmaline is one of seven varieties of tourmaline and is one of the rarest. The aptly­named watermelon variety blushes with a fruity pink center that is encased in a layer of green signifying the rind. Often icy crystal forms a layer between the pink and green too. While other tourmalines can be comprised of two or more colors, this unique coloring is quite prized by gem enthusiasts as it is completely natural -- a most unusual occurrence in nature. Scoring a 7.5 on the hardness scale, watermelon tourmaline is typically cut in a table or baguette shape that shows off the coloring most advantageously.

Citrine, the yellow or golden variety of quartz, does not often make for gem­quality stones, but when it does it is truly a dazzling vision. Gemstone quality citrine is found mainly in Brazil, Spain, and parts of Russia. Scoring 7 on the hardness scale, this golden stone is often faceted for brilliant, mixed, or pendeloque cuts and is sometimes used for cabochons and necklaces .

Carnelian is another ancient gemstone of the chalcedony group. As hot wax did not stick to the stone, the Romans employed red carnelian in their seal and signet rings to stamp their important papers or letters. Lacking the brilliance of red stones like rubies, carnelian's red is dull, but its translucent quality gives it great beauty nonetheless.Used in rings, necklaces, cameos, intaglios, and fashioned into beads.

Resembling but far more fragile than emeralds, dioptase ranges in color from intensely bright green to a remarkable (and rare) blue­green. Treasured by collectors, dioptase crystals are found in copper deposits in Chile, Russia, Zaire, and Arizona. Because the stone is fragile, it is seldom faceted, but the polished stone are also made.

Rarely faceted, apatite makes for a gorgeous jewel stone nonetheless. Sometimes found opaque or without color apatite can be seen in yellow, green, blue, and even violet examples. Blue­gray fibrous apatite is particularly beautiful, but the more brilliant varieties of green, yellow, and blue rival more popular gemstones in beauty. Found in Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Russia, Spain, Mexico, Sweden, and East Africa, apatite scores a 5 on the hardness scale and its best examples sometimes display a cat's eye effect.

Tugtupite, meaning reindeer stone occurs in Greenland and parts of Russia. Its colors include shades or orange, deep red, and pink. It is not a very well stone as it was discovered by geologists in 1957, although it was well known by Inuits for centuries.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Moonstone - A Gemstone

A moonstone shows a silvery play of color when held up to the light that resembles
moonbeams moving over water. The Romans believed that an image of Diana, goddess
of the moon, was contained within this stone. They also thought that the light within
the stone was moonlight that had solidified.

The characteristic play of color in a moonstone is called schiller or adularescence, and
is caused by light interacting with the layers of albite and orthoclase feldspar within the
stone. The light is scattered in a way that produces a luster.

The typical moonstone is white, but other colors are found. The most prized are
rainbow moonstone and stones with a bluish cast. Moonstones are cut, almost
exclusively, as cabochons. Achieving the customary play of light requires careful and
skillful cutting, aligning the axes into the zenith of the stone.

Many spiritual properties are attributed to moonstone. It is thought to bring good
fortune, and to protect women and children. The most important attribute, according to
healers, is the balancing of male and female energies.

It is mined in India, Brazil, Germany, Mexico, Burma, and the US. In the United
States, moonstone is the official stone for the states of Florida and New York. It is an
alternative to alexandrite or pearl as a birthstone for June.
To Moonstone necklaces visit www.muditinternational.com

Lapis Lazuli

Lapis lazuli, the alternate birthstone for September, was once the source of the pigment known as ultramarine blue. It has been mined in Afghanistan for six thousand years. It is said to protect its wearer from the evil eye.
The alternative birthstone for September is lapis lazuli, which is a rock, not a mineral.Its main component is the mineral lazurite. The rock may also contain calcite, sodalite, and pyrite. Lapis was ground to make ultramarine blue tempera and oil paints used in illuminated medieval manuscripts and Renaissance panels.

Lapis lazuli has been the subject of poetry and literature. The poem "Lapis Lazuli" written by William Butler Yeats,reflects upon the role of art in a war torn world. In the ancient Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh, lapis lazuli is the material of which the horns of the Bull of Heaven are formed. In Marian Moore´s poem "The Talisman", lapis appears as a carved scarab. And in the science fiction novel A Time for Love, by Robert A. Heinlein, Lapis Lazuli is the name of one of the main character´s twin cloned daughters.

Lapis lazuli has been mined in Afghanistan for over six thousand years. The ancient Egyptians and Mesopotamians obtained lapis from Afghanistan and used it for necklaces, carvings, vases, mosaics and architectural features.

Some cultures regarded lapis as a holy stone. It is said to harmonize the heart and mind. Legend says that lapis lazuli protects the wearer from the evil eye.

Although the best lapis lazuli is mined in Afghanistan, it is also found in Chile, Russia, Pakistan, India, Canada and the US.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

The Beneficent hush-hush of Stones

Rocks, stones and crystals, precious or not have their own electromagnetic
Frequency. They contain a specific energy, express oneself by their color and
Inner structure. With all this, we don't like just all stones, but just those
Which enter into resonance with our energetic field, sending us the energy
that we need in that precise moment.

Gold, silver and copper
For the healing effect of the stones to be more intense, they must be carried
into the right of energetic center that we have on our body, correspondingly,
above ours heart or above ours neck, by all means direct on skin, because the
energy and our heat amplifies the inner energy of the stone, and in the same
time magnify the effectiveness.
The ear-rings with crystals balances the force of our intellectual hemispheres,
and the rings stimulate the influence to the specific meridians to the hand that
they are carried ( on the left hand they stimulates the reception of energy,
and right hand the emission).
It is important to keep in mind that the recommended metals for the stones
mounting are silver, gold and copper, the others being energetic unstrung,
reason for which they act as some power energetic vampires.
The compulsory cleansing
Before you use or carry the stones, we recommend purifying them, in order to
don't take over, negative power and his weak load, stored before they came
into our possession.
For this it is enough to hold the stone an hour below strong water cold spurt,
for choice of spring, or between 30 as far as 70 hours in brine. If you want
a drastic purification, therefore either we keep 24 of hours the respective
stone in bay salt either we bury it in earth on all of a lunar loop.
The flux of energy

Once we have purified is needfulness render our stone the positive energy.
Just expose it to the sun three day consecutive or exposit to the moon shine
if is talking about opal.
Crystal therapy
Crystal therapy don't replace the pure medical methods of treatments but just
potentiate and balance the power connections short cuted by the disease.
Thus:
Amethyst acts against the insomnia, of the apprehension and the trepidation and is
recommended in diets, potentiate the debilitation in weight.
Aquamarine attenuates the sea sickness and the disturbances of urination .
The coral helps with digestion, soothes the headaches and cures affections
of the oral cavity.
The transparent quartz inducts get along with the life, and one light-tight
silence and agreement.
The rose quartz reacts on the heart and the circulation and helps with the
reconstruction after an affective trauma.
The diamond sweeps off the fogs and disclose the direction in life.
The jade inducts calm in moments of stress and emotive tension.
The pearl dissolves the hostilities and the bad continuations and reinforces
the inner force and hope.
The emerald decreases the congestions and balance the internal energies.
Turquoise reacts on the lungs and the neck.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Gemstones, facts and information.


Our gems, our jewels! Here is a laydown on the nature of some of the gems available with us in the form of exotic pieces of jewellery.
Amethyst is a violet variety of quartz. Owing to its extravagant colour, it is prdominantly used as an adornment stone in jewelleries. Amethyst is composed of an irregular superposition of alternate lamellae of right-handed and left-handed quartz. It has been shown that this structure may be due to mechanical stresses.
Amethyst occurs in primary hues from a light pinkish violet to a deep purple. Amethyst may exhibit one or both secondary hues, red and/or blue. The ideal grade is called "Deep Siberian" and has a primary purple hue of around 75–80 percent, 15–20 percent blue and (depending on the light source) red secondary hues.[6]
Traditionally included in the cardinal, or most valuable, gemstones (along with diamond, sapphire, ruby, and emerald), amethyst has lost much of its value due to the discovery of extensive deposits in locations such as Brazil. The highest grade amethyst (called "Deep Russian") is exceptionally rare and therefore its value is dependent on thea demand of collectors when one is found. It is however still orders of magnitude lower than the highest grade sapphires or rubies (sapphire or "pigeon's blood" ruby).
We have exploited the beauty of Amethyst in the form of beautiful adornments like necklaces, rings and bracelets.
No gemstone is more creatively striped by Nature than agate, chalcedony quartz that forms in concentric layers in a wide variety of colours and textures. Each individual agate forms by filling a cavity in host rock. As a result, agate is often found as a round nodule, with concentric bands like the rings of a tree trunk. The bands sometimes look like eyes, fanciful scallops, or even a landscape with trees

Most agates occur as
nodules in volcanic rocks or ancient lavas where they represent cavities originally produced by the disengagement of volatiles in the molten mass which were then filled, wholly or partially, by siliceous matter deposited in regular layers upon the walls. Such agates, when cut transversely, exhibit a succession of parallel lines, often of extreme tenuity, giving a banded appearance to the section. Such stones are known as banded agate, riband agate and striped agate.
Aventurine
Yet another member of the Quartz family, it is most commonly found in royal green color. Besides green, it can also be found in orange, brown, yellow, blue, and gray. Aventurine is characterized by the flecks of mineral inclusions that gives it a sparkly look. It is found in many parts of the world including India, Brazil, and Russia. It is called the ‘lucky talisman’ and is supposed to increase libido, reduce stress, and strengthen blood and muscle tissues.
Aventurine looks its best cabochon and bead shape. Available in many colours and hues, you can fire your imagination to bead stylish adornments of this beautiful stone.
Click to view our collection.
Goldstone
Goldstone with its fine finish when beaded together in a jewellery form looks absolutely stunning. It is a type of glass made with copper or copper salts in the presence of a reducing flame.
The most common form of goldstone gives the illusion of being reddish-brown, although in fact that color comes from the copper crystals and the glass itself is colorless. Some goldstone variants have an intensely-colored glass matrix—usually blue or violet, more rarely green—and a more silvery appearance to the suspended crystals, whose color may be partially masked by the glass or which may be based on different metals than copper.
View our collection.
Bloodstone
There is a belief that the bloodstone was formed from the blood of Christ dripping on the green earth and solidifying. Incidentally, thus mystic stone is green with distinctive red spots that resemble blood, thereby justifying its name. Sometimes yellow and/or other colors of jasper are also present, but these multi-colored gemstones are usually called "fancy jasper".
This attractive chalcedony quartz is also known as heliotrope because in ancient times polished stones were described as reflecting the sun: perhaps the appearance of the gem reminded the ancients of the red setting sun, mirrored in the ocean. The beads of this stone when hand-beaded together looks absolutely beautiful.
Have a look at our collection.
In a stark yellow tinge, Citrine belonging to the family of quartz is often mistaken for Topaz. These beautiful gemstone are just meant for adornment. It is any quartz crystal or cluster that is yellow or orange in color. Although often cut as a gemstone, citrine is actually somewhat rare in nature
Like all crystal quartzes, the citrine has a hardness of 7 on the Mohs scale and is thus, to a large extent, insensitive to scratches. It won't immediately take offence at being knocked about either, since its cleavage properties are non-existent. Even if their refractive index is relatively low, the yellow stones have just that mellow, warm tone that seems to have captured the last glow of autumn.
Citrine beaded jewellery.
Carnelian, sometimes spelled cornelian, is a red or reddish-brown variant of chalcedony.
Its radiant orange hue has been mesmerizing women folk since Roman times for embellishments.
Carnelian is a 7 on the Mohs scale and has been used for centuries to carve beautiful cameos. It is found in Australia, Brazil, Madagascar, Russia, South Africa, and the USA.
Carnelian is a 7 on the Mohs scale and has been used for centuries to carve beautiful cameos. It is found in Australia, Brazil, Madagascar, Russia, South Africa, and the USA.
Our collection of jewellery in Carnelian.
The extremely beautiful rich red coloured stone which you often mistake for Ruby is Garnet. Tagged as one of the most beautiful semi-precious stones, it is the most sought after stone for carving jewelleries for today its royal red and green colours. Furthermore, the world of the garnets is also rich in rarities such as star garnets and stones whose colour changes depending on whether they are seen in daylight or artificial light.

It is true to say that red is the colour most often encountered, but the garnet also exists in various shades of green, a tender to intense yellow, a fiery orange and some fine earth-coloured nuances. The only colour it cannot offer is blue.
Lapis lazuli with its deep blue colour seems to have emerged from the Arabian Nights. This opaque, deep blue gemstone has a grand past. It was among the first gemstones to be worn as jewellery and worked on during the Alexander times.
Lapis lazuli is an opaque rock that mainly consists of diopside and lazurite. It came into being millions of years ago during the metamorphosis of lime to marble. Uncut, Lapis
lazuli is matt and of a deep, dark blue colour, often with golden inclusions and whitish marble veins. The small inclusions with their golden shimmer, which give the stone the magic of a starry sky, are not of gold as people used to think, but of pyrites.
The Moonstone is characterised by an enchanting play of light. Indeed it owes its name to that mysterious shimmer which always looks different when the stone is moved and is known in the trade as 'adularescence'. In earlier times, people believed they could recognise in it the crescent and waning phases of the moon
Moonstones from Sri Lanka, the classical country of origin of the Moonstone shimmer in pale blue on an almost transparent background. Specimens from India feature a nebulous interplay of light and shadow on a background of beige-brown, green, orange or brown. These discreet colours, in connection with the fine shimmer, make the Moonstone is an ideal gemstone for jewellery with a sensual, feminine aura.