Gemstone

Onyx

Black chalcedony with a name borrowed from Greek — onyx, meaning nail or claw. A dark, dense stone with a long history of signet rings and mourning jewellery, now the tradition's anchor for the root and the work of standing firm.

Black

Onyx is chalcedony — a fine-grained quartz that forms in volcanic rock, taking its black colour from organic carbon dispersed through the stone as it crystallises. The name comes from the Greek onyx, meaning nail or claw, though whether it named the stone for its banded appearance or for a mythological story involving a fingernail depends on which source you read. Both versions have been doing the rounds since antiquity.

The Romans carved signet rings from it. The Victorians wore it in mourning. For most of recorded history, black has meant serious — and onyx, being uniformly, unapologetically dark, carried the weight. It was a stone you chose, not a stone that surprised you.

In the crystal tradition it lives at the root chakra — the earth element's home in the yogic map — and is reached for when the ground underfoot seems unreliable. Leo and Capricorn are its traditional zodiac companions: the lion for its quiet command, the goat for its patience and endurance. The intentions the tradition gathers around it are steadiness of mind, clarity of purpose, and the unglamorous work of staying present when things are difficult.

The honesty in this is plain: a stone does not carry intention by itself. But it does offer a surface to return to — something smooth and cool in the palm when the afternoon has scattered the morning's purpose. Hold it, name what you need, set it where you work. Let it be the object that keeps the note.

In the catalogue you'll find onyx as tumbled stones, pendulums, bracelets and rings — a dark, dense stone with enough history to take the assignment seriously.

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