Gemstone

Black Tourmaline

The tradition's great protective stone — matte black, grounding, paired with the root chakra and kept by doorways and desks.

Black

Black tourmaline — schorl, to mineralogists — is the workhorse of the tourmaline family: a boron silicate that grows in long striated columns, matte black and surprisingly light in the hand.

It has one genuinely strange property. Heat or rub a tourmaline crystal and it becomes electrically charged, attracting dust and ash — the Dutch traders who first imported it called it aschentrekker, the ash-puller. Eighteenth-century scientists studied it; modern pressure gauges still use it. A stone with a documented party trick.

In the crystal tradition, black tourmaline is the protective stone — the one placed by doorways, carried in coat pockets, and set on desks through difficult seasons. It belongs to the root chakra; Capricorn and Libra share it in the zodiac. Where other stones invite, this one is felt to guard — a boundary made mineral.

The tradition treats it less as a shield than as an agreement you make with yourself: place the stone by the door, name what stays outside, and let it mark the threshold. The boundary is yours — the stone keeps it visible, which on the difficult days is most of the work.

You'll find it in our catalogue as raw pieces and tumbled stones, in orgonite cones alongside selenite and copper, and in bracelets where it does quiet duty next to brighter company.

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