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  • Agate

    Agate is a colorful and hard mineral, belonging to a variety of quartz. It has a layered structure, usually displaying rainbow-like stripes with rich colors. Common colors include white, gray, red, blue, green, yellow, and many others. Different colors can even feature transitional color bands and natural patterns. Each piece of agate is unique in…

  • Clear Quartz

    Clear Quartz is a widely found mineral in nature. Its chemical composition is silica (SiO₂), and it is the purest and most transparent member of the quartz family. It is the second most abundant mineral in the Earth’s crust, after feldspar. Its crystal structure is hexagonal, usually in the shape of a six-sided prism, with…

  • Moonstone

    Moonstone is a translucent or transparent gemstone named for its unique optical phenomenon—”Adularescence.” This effect creates a soft, glowing halo on the surface of the moonstone, resembling moonlight shimmering on water, which shifts with the angle of observation. This ethereal glow has made moonstone a cherished gem since ancient times, believed to carry mystical and…

  • Amazonite

    Amazonite, also known as the Amazon Stone, is named for its captivating green to turquoise color. The stone is named after the Amazon River basin, even though it is not found in that region; its color, resembling the river’s waters, is what gave it the name. 1. The Relationship Between Amazonite and the Five Elements…

  • Rutilated Quartz

    Rutilated Quartz is a type of transparent crystal that contains metallic minerals, mainly in the form of needle-like or thread-like inclusions of “Rutile” (Titanium Dioxide). The transparent crystal itself is quartz (SiO₂), while rutile (Rutile) is the inclusion inside, typically presenting as fine, metallic threads of gold, red, or silver. These metallic threads crisscross within…

  • Pearl

    Pearl is an organic gemstone naturally formed by certain mollusks (such as oysters and mussels) under specific conditions. When foreign objects (such as sand grains or parasites) invade the bodies of these mollusks, they secrete a substance called nacre to protect themselves, gradually enveloping the foreign object. Over time, these layers of nacre eventually form…