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NATURE CRYSTAL

Providing Everything You Need

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AMETHYST

Amethyst has been highly esteemed throughout the ages for its stunning beauty 
and legendary powers to stimulate, and soothe, the mind and emotions. 
It is a semi-precious stone in today’s classifications, but to the ancients, 
it was a “Gem of Fire"; a Precious Stone worth, at times in history, as much as a Diamond

CITRINE

Natural Citrine is a premier stone of manifestation, imagination, and personal will. 


Carrying the power of the sun, it is warm and comforting, energizing and life giving. 


It stimulates the chakras like the sunlight of spring, clearing the mind and stirring the soul to action. 
Its frequency awakens creativity and imagination, 
and sustains the process of transforming dreams and wishes into tangible form

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QUARTZ

Quartz is a hard, crystalline mineral composed of silicon and oxygen atoms. 


The atoms are linked in a continuous framework of SiO4 silicon–oxygen tetrahedra,  with each oxygen being shared between two tetrahedra, giving an overall chemical formula of SiO2. 


Quartz is the second most abundant mineral in Earth's continental crust, behind feldspar

BERYL

The name beryl comes from the Latin word “beryllus,” which is a "precious blue-green color-of-sea-water stone.” 


Beryl is the star sign stone for Scorpio and the talismanic stone for Sagittarius. The mineral can be opaque to translucent with a vitreous luster.
 

Beryl rates a 7.5 to 8 on the Moh’s hardness scale, which makes it well suited for use in jewelry.

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CORUNDUM

With its hardness and durability, corundum can be used in jewelry designs that see high traffic or likelihood of impacts: bracelets, rings, anklets, etc. Use corundum according to its color. 


If red, consider designing as if it were ruby. 


If blue, the uses of sapphire are a good guideline.

Colorless corundum, of course, can go anywhere!

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TOPAZ

The name Topaz is derived from the Greek word topazion, which may have originated from the Sanskrit term tapas, meaning fire.


It may also have come from the Egyptian island of Topazos in the Red Sea.


Pliny the Elder used the name of the island for the yellow-green crystal found there.

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