Gemstone
Opalite
A man-made opalescent glass with a sea-glass glow — honest about its origins, loved for its colour, and paired in practice with the crown chakra.
Milky iridescent
Let's begin with what makes opalite unusual on this shelf: it is made by people. Opalescent glass, not a mineral — and we'd rather say so plainly, because it changes nothing about its beauty.
And the beauty is real: glass formulated to scatter light the way the moon does through thin cloud — milky blue against a dark background, warm gold against a pale one. The effect is the same physics that colours the daytime sky, miniaturised into something you can hold. No two angles give the same colour.
Modern crystal practice has adopted opalite on its own terms. Its softness of colour has attached it to the crown and third-eye chakras, to calm, and to transitions — new homes, new chapters, endings handled gracefully. Tradition here is young, a few decades rather than millennia, and we see no problem with that. Every tradition was young once.
Why stock a man-made stone at all? Because beauty doesn't check certificates. Opalite is affordable, consistent, kind to jewellery-makers, and gives a glow that few natural stones match at any price — it asks only to be loved as what it is.
In the catalogue: pendants and necklaces, gemstone angels and small carved symbols. Each one is glass, and each one is lovely. Both things are true.
Shop Opalite
Collier cordon pendentif en pierre fine – Ange en opalite
Prix régulier £1095Prix unitaireEn stockCollier en opalite, cristal brut, chaîne 50 cm
Prix soldé £1695 Prix régulier £1860Prix unitaireEn stockCollier pendentif en opalite, cage tourbillon
Prix soldé £2099 Prix régulier £2481Prix unitaireEn stockCollier pendentif Arbre de vie en opalite
Prix soldé £2099 Prix régulier £2481Prix unitaireEn stock