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- Beads made from natural minerals
- Exclusive collection crystals and minerals
- Investment gemstones – natural cut stones
- Alexandrite – a natural gemstone with variable color
- Amethyst – cut natural stones
- Ametrine – a mineral with a combination of purple and yellow colors
- Aquamarine – a natural beryl gemstone in shades of blue
- Chrysoberyl – a gemstone of yellow-green hues
- Citrine natural cut mineral
- Emerald – a natural green beryl gemstone
- Ethiopian opal – natural cut gemstone opal
- Garnet natural cut gemstone
- Heliodor (golden beryl) natural cut gemstone
- Kunzite
- Mix other cut stones
- Moonstone – a gemstone with a pearly sheen
- Morganite natural gemstone beryl
- Olivine (peridot)
- Ruby natural cut gemstone
- Sapphire - cut natural gemstones
- Blue sapphire – a gemstone from Sri Lanka
- Green sapphire – a gemstone from Sri Lanka
- Padparadscha sapphire – a rare gemstone from Sri Lanka
- Pink sapphire – a gemstone from Sri Lanka
- Star sapphire – a sapphire with a star on the surface
- White sapphire – a gemstone from Sri Lanka
- Yellow sapphire – a gemstone from Sri Lanka
- Sinhalite
- Smokyquartz
- Spinel natural cut gemstone
- Sunstone natural cut stone
- Tanzanite – a rare natural gemstone from Tanzania
- Topaz natural cut mineral
- Tourmaline natural cut gemstone
- Zircon – natural cut gemstones with high shine
- NATURAL MINERALS - GEMSTONES - CRYSTALS - DRUISES
- Afghanite - a rare natural mineral from Afghanistan
- Agate – natural minerals, polished stones and collector's items
- Agni Manitite - dark impact glass referred to as tektite
- Amber – fossilized resin of Tertiary trees
- Amethyst – natural crystals and druses
- Ametrine – a natural mineral combining amethyst and citrine
- Andean opal – blue natural opal
- Andean opal – pink natural opal
- Angelite – natural and collector minerals
- Apatite – natural and collector minerals
- APOPHYLITE, STILBITE, ZEOLITE natural minerals and crystals
- Aquamarine – high quality natural and collector minerals
- Aragonite – natural minerals and crystalline aggregates
- Astrophyllite – rare and collectible minerals
- Auralite – a natural mineral formed by a combination of several minerals
- Axinite – a natural mineral of the borosilicate group
- Azurite – natural minerals and crystalline aggregates
- Barite – natural and collector minerals
- Brazilianite – a rare yellowish-green phosphate mineral
- Calcite – a natural calcium carbonate mineral
- Carnelian – natural minerals and polished stones
- Cavansite – natural and collector minerals
- Celestite – natural minerals and crystalline druses
- Chalcedony – natural microcrystalline quartz
- Charoite – natural and collector minerals
- Chromdiopside – a natural mineral of the pyroxene group
- CHRYSOCOLLA - MALACHITE - AZURITE
- Chrysocolla – natural minerals and polished stones
- Chrysoprase – green-colored chalcedony with nickel content
- Citrine – natural minerals and cut stones
- Clinoatacamite – a natural copper chloride mineral
- Cobaltocalcite – natural calcite containing cobalt
- Columbianite – natural and collector tektites (impact glass)
- Copper – natural pure copper and collector's items
- Danburite
- Dendritic opal (Merlinite) – natural common opal with dendrites
- Diopside – a green silicate mineral with a crystalline structure
- Dioptas – ein natürliches Kupfersilikatmineral
- Dolomite – a natural mineral of the carbonate group
- Dumortierite – a natural mineral of the borosilicate group
- Emerald – green-colored beryl of natural origin
- Ethiopian opal – natural gemstone opal
- Eudialyte – natural and collector minerals
- Fluorite – a mineral with a distinctive crystalline structure and color
- Garnet – natural and collector minerals
- Grape chalcedony – natural chalcedony with a botryoid structure
- Hackmanite – a natural mineral of the sodalite group
- Haüyn/Hauyne natural green (sodalite) mineral
- Haüyn/hauynite blue (sodalite)
- Heliodor (golden beryl) – yellow-colored beryl of natural origin
- Hemimorphite – natural and collector minerals
- Hiddenite – a natural mineral of the spodumene group
- Iolite (cordierite) – natural and collector minerals
- Jade - Jadeite natural minerals and polished stones
- Jasper – natural minerals and polished stones
- K2 - Azurite in granite
- Kunzite – a natural variety of spodumene
- Kyanite – a natural aluminosilicate mineral
- Labradorite – natural minerals and polished stones
- Lapis lazuli/lazurite – natural minerals and polished stones
- Larimar – a rare blue natural mineral
- Lemurian crystal – natural and collectible quartz crystals
- Libyan glass – natural tektite formed by an impact event
- Lodolite (quartz crystal with inclusions)
- Malachite – natural minerals and polished stones
- Meteorite – a natural rock and metal material from space
- Moldavite – rare natural tektite (impact glass)
- Moonstone (adular) – natural feldspar with adularescence
- Moqui Marbles – natural sandstone concretions with iron oxides
- Morganite – a natural gemstone of the beryl group
- Natural mussels (freshwater mussels)
- Nefrite, Jade – natural minerals and polished stones
- Nuummite – Archean metamorphic rock from Greenland
- Obsidian – natural collectible volcanic glass
- Olivine (peridot) – green magnesium-iron silicate
- Pentagonite rare blue mineral
- Petalite – a natural lithium aluminum silicate mineral
- Phenacite/Phenakite – a natural non-silicate mineral containing beryllium
- Phosphosiderite – natural and collector minerals
- Pietersite natural mineral – brecciated chalcedony with fibrous inclusions
- Pollucite - a rare natural zeolite mineral of pegmatite origin
- Prehnit – natural and collector minerals
- Pyrite – a natural mineral
- Quantum Quattro – a natural association of chrysocolla, shattuckite, dioptase and malachite
- Quartz/crystal - raw
- Quartz/crystal – processed natural minerals
- Rhodochrosite – a natural manganese carbonate mineral
- Rhodonite – a natural manganese silicate mineral
- Rose quartz – a natural variety of quartz
- Roselite – natural and collector minerals
- Rubelit/red tourmaline
- Ruby in zoisite
- Ruby – natural and collectible gemstones
- Sagenite (Venus' hair) – natural quartz with rutile inclusions
- Sapphire – a natural gemstone of the corundum group
- Scapolite – a natural mineral of the tectosilicate group
- Scolecite – fibrous zeolite with needle-like crystals
- Selenite – a natural crystalline variety of gypsum
- Seraphinite – dark green clinchlorite with a typical pattern
- Shungite – Precambrian carbonaceous rock from Karelia
- Skoryl (tourmaline) – natural and collector minerals
- Smoky quartz – a natural variety of quartz
- Smokyquartz with rutile – natural quartz with rutile inclusions
- Sphalerite – zinc sulfide with significant color variability
- Spinel – natural gemstone
- Sugilite – natural minerals and polished stones
- Sunstone with iolite – natural and collector minerals
- Sunstone – natural feldspar with aventurescence
- Superseven (Super 7) – natural quartz with multiple mineral inclusions
- Tanzanite gemstone – a blue-violet variety of zoisite of natural origin
- Tektite – a natural glassy material formed by an impact event
- Thulite is a pink variety of the mineral zoisite
- Tiger's Eye – natural minerals and polished stones
- Titanite (sphene) – natural and collector minerals
- Topaz – natural and collectible gemstones
- Tourmaline – natural and collector minerals
- Triplite – natural and collector minerals
- Tugtupit
- Turquoise – natural minerals and polished stones
- Vanadinite – a natural lead vanadate mineral
- Vesuvianite (idocrase) – a natural silicate mineral
- Zircon – natural and collector's gemstones
- Original jewelry made from natural minerals and gemstones
- Bracelets made of natural minerals
- Other jewelry made from natural minerals
- Silver and gemstone jewelry
- Abalone/Paua shell
- Aquamarine natural mineral beryl pendant
- Astrophyllite – silver pendant made of natural mineral
- Azurite silver pendant made of natural mineral
- Azurite-malachite-chrysocolla silver pendant made of natural mineral
- Black tourmaline (scoryl)
- Charoite – silver pendant made of natural mineral
- Chrysoprase – silver pendant made of natural chalcedony
- Cobaltocalcite – silver pendants made from a natural mineral
- Dendritic opal – pendants made of natural opal with dendrites
- Ethiopian opal – silver pendant made of natural gemstone
- Eudialyte – silver pendant made of natural mineral
- Kavansite – silver pendants made from natural mineral
- Kunzite and hiddenite – silver pendants made of natural spodumene
- Labradorite – silver pendant made of natural mineral
- Larimar jewelry – silver pendants made from a unique natural mineral
- Malachite – jewelry made from natural mineral
- Moldavite
- Moonstone (adular) – jewelry made from a natural mineral
- Morganite – jewelry made from natural gemstone
- Nuummite – natural mineral silver pendant
- Obsidian – pendants made of natural volcanic glass
- Olivine/Peridot
- Pietersite – silver jewelry made from natural chalcedony
- Quantum Quattro – jewelry made from the natural association of chrysocolla, malachite and shattuckite
- Rhodochrosite – silver pendant made from a natural mineral
- Ruby
- Sagenit
- Seraphinite – jewelry made from the chlorite variety with a pearly pattern
- Sugilite – pendants made from natural mineral
- Sunstone jewelry
- Turquoise – jewelry made from a natural mineral
- Special offer – discounts on natural minerals and gemstones
Jade - Jadeite natural minerals and polished stones
Jadeite is a monoclinic mineral, the chemical formula of Na (AlFe3 +) (Si2O6). According to Strunz classification 9.DA.25 - silicates from pyroxene group. The name of the mineral comes from the Spanish word piedra de ijada, which means kidney stone or lumbar stone for its alleged healing ability. The Spaniards began to encounter this mineral on the aggressive routes to Central America. Later, the name was abbreviated on jade, from which jadeite originated. It is formed during low-temperature high-pressure metamorphosis in sodium-rich serpentinite rocks, in eclogites, in jadeites, glaucophanites and occasionally in metagabras. Pseudomorphosis after jade, serpentine, is also known. Mineral is white, gray, green, gray-green, rarely green-blue to violet. The scratch is white, greasy to vitreous, it is opaque, but shines on the edges.
Jadeit is and has been widely used for the production of statuettes and small aesthetic items, as it is very easy to process. Jadeite Olmec, for example, made ritual items and jadeite was more valuable to them than gold and other gems.
The stone was used to make death masks, weapons, jewelry and jade pearls, stones and balls. The stones and balls embedded in the statues were the heart of the Aztecs, and in the mouth of the deceased they were a symbol of life-cycle renewal, rebirth. For the New Zealand Maori and their related Moriors from the Chatham Islands, jade and jade, known as pounamu, is a sacred stone used to make ancestral statues, ornaments, amulets, and in the past weapons. The best quality jade used for carving is the so-called imperial jade, which originates mainly from Burma and which began to reach China in the 18th century. Jadeite is sporadically found in Chan-era finds, but his fame begins in the 18th century when he began to replace the stones of the old era, nephrites from Taiwan, the Kun-Lun Mountains and Sayan or Mongolia. Jade is green, pink, gray-blue, white, black, yellowish and orange-brown, a crust of jade. The imperial jade is a highly sought after and valued stone in the field of Chinese culture, the price of which compares to the best emeralds and even surpasses them in color. In the Euro-American region, jade is not so popular, even though it has been more and more set in jewelry with diamonds since the Art Deco style. The emerald jade of emerald green is followed by other, albeit cheaper shades. In China, the imperial jade is also an investment stone. In Europe, jade is mistaken for jewels (jade, jade), vendors sell colored jade, serpentines, aventurines and other minerals instead of jade. This gives the impression of cheap and easy availability of gemstone jade of all colors. Cheaper, commercial raw material is used for carvings of statuettes and figurines. Burmese jade is the most precious, Kazakh and Ural jade followed after Burmese jade.