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Tourmaline — The Rainbow Mineral
Tourmaline is a boron silicate mineral group that occurs in more colors than any other mineral species. Black tourmaline (schorl) is the most common variety, while pink, green, blue (indicolite), and watermelon tourmaline are prized by collectors. Major sources include Brazil, Afghanistan, Mozambique, Nigeria, and Maine (USA).
Why does tourmaline come in so many colors?
Tourmaline's color depends on its chemical composition. Iron produces black and brown, manganese creates pink and red, lithium yields green and blue, and chromium produces the rare chrome tourmaline. Some crystals show multiple colors in a single specimen — watermelon tourmaline has a pink center with a green rind.
What is black tourmaline used for?
Black tourmaline (schorl) is one of the most popular collecting minerals. Its piezoelectric properties — it generates an electrical charge under pressure — make it scientifically interesting. Collectors display it alongside obsidian and smoky quartz for dramatic dark mineral displays.
A Sanctuary of Natural Beauty
Every crystal here was discovered by hand, selected with intuition, and photographed in its true light — never stock imagery, never mass-produced.
Pieces chosen for collectors, dreamers, and homes that value soul over spectacle. Timeless, mineral works of art — shaped by the Earth, refined by intention.
One-of-a-Kind. Forever Pieces.
Let the Universe Decide