Gemstone

Jasper

Jasper is chalcedony — quartz coloured by iron — one of the oldest stones in human use, carrying the earth's own palette of reds, browns and ochres. The tradition holds it at the root.

Varied earth tones

Jasper is chalcedony — microcrystalline quartz — coloured by iron oxides and the occasional trace of other minerals. The name comes from the Old French jaspre, which traces back through Latin and Greek to something meaning spotted or stained. That accuracy is fitting: no two jaspers look alike. The patterns are determined by the sediment it formed in, and that makes every piece slightly different.

The colours are the first thing to notice. Earthy reds and warm ochres, rich browns, muted yellows — occasionally a deep forest green or a blue-grey. These are not decorative choices. They are the earth itself, compressed and mineralised, and that is partly why jasper has spent five thousand years in human hands. The Minoans carved it. The Romans used it for signet rings. It appears in Bronze Age graves and in the breastplate of the High Priest as described in the Hebrew scriptures.

The tradition holds jasper at the root chakra — the seat of steadiness, the place that knows where the ground is. Its element is earth. Its zodiac companion is Aries, the fire sign that benefits from a little geological weight. The words most often paired with it are grounding, courage and steadiness.

The honest invitation is this: the stone works alongside your practice, not instead of it. Hold it briefly in the morning while you name an intention in plain words — stability, resolve, showing up — and let it keep the note through the day. When the floor seems uncertain, it offers a physical place for the attention to return to. The practice is yours. The stone keeps it in view.

Below you'll find what the catalogue holds in jasper: tumbled stones, rough pieces, pendulums and jewellery in its full range of earth tones.

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