Stone Library

Natural crystal and gemstone collection representing geological stone formation for The Jewelers Bench Stone Library
Natural crystal and gemstone collection representing geological stone formation for The Jewelers Bench Stone Library

Understanding the materials behind the craft.

From geological formation to spiritual symbolism — explore the stones used at The Jewelers Bench.

How Stones Form

All natural stones used in jewelry originate through one of three geological processes:

🔥 Igneous – Fire & Cooling

Formed from molten magma or lava.
Example: Lava Stone.

🪨 Sedimentary – Layering & Compression

Formed through accumulated mineral deposits under pressure.
Example: Sea Sediment Jasper.

⛰ Metamorphic – Transformation Under Pressure

Formed when existing rock transforms under heat and pressure.
Example: Jade, certain quartz environments.

Heat.
Pressure.
Time.

These forces shape both stone and character.

👉 Read the full article on how stones form.

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Sourcing Philosophy

Sourcing & Transparency

The bead market includes:

• Fully natural stones
• Heat-treated stones
• Color-enhanced stones
• Stabilized materials
• Reconstituted composites

When known, these distinctions are documented.

Every stone and material I purchase is chosen with one purpose — to add beauty to the piece it becomes.

All of my jewelry is made to be worn regularly, not stored away. I believe the true value of any piece of jewelry is not its price, but the memories it creates, the milestones it marks, and the goals it represents once achieved.

Every piece of jewelry I own carries a sentimental value that far surpasses its dollar value. That is what I hope the pieces I create will carry for others as well.

Some stones are prized for rarity.
Others are valued for beauty and accessibility.

Both have their place — when properly represented.

Stone Library

Assorted amethyst beads and raw amethyst crystals showing variation in color saturation, cut, and natural formation used in jewelry design

Amethyst

Amethyst in multiple forms — raw crystal, polished round beads, faceted beads, and tube cuts — illustrating natural variation documented in the Stone Library.

Pink Sea Sediment Jasper

Botswana Agate

Aventurine

Lapis Lazuli

Rose Quartz

Lava Stone

Purple and Green Flourite

Pink Tourmaline & Persian Jade

Garnet

Turquoise Howlite

Black Labrodorite