Humanity's Oldest Companions
Long before anyone called it healing—before chakras had names or crystals had Instagram accounts—people reached for stones. Sumerians ground lapis into elixirs. Greeks named amber elektron for the spark it carried. Ayurvedic practitioners matched gems to planets. Medieval mystics documented the properties of minerals in convent manuscripts. Across continents and centuries, the instinct was the same: in moments of transition, protection, or connection to something larger, humans reach for what the earth has made.
These bowls carry that lineage. When moldavite or moonstone or pyrite is infused into quartz during formation, it becomes part of the bowl's molecular structure—not a coating, but integrated into what vibrates. The stone doesn't just sit in the bowl. It sings through it. Properties that people have attributed to these minerals for thousands of years now travel on sound waves, filling spaces, touching everyone who hears.
You'll find familiar stones here—citrine, fluorite, lapis, opal—alongside rarer companions like tsavorite, kornerupine, and iolite. Some you may have worked with for years. Others might be meeting you for the first time. Each carries its own resonance, its own tradition, its own invitation. Browse by what calls to you—the stones have been waiting.
Mineral & Gem
Before words, there were stones