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Journal

Crystal Bracelet Bead Size Guide: 8mm vs 10mm Explained

Choosing between 8mm and 10mm crystal bracelet beads? Understand how size affects wrist proportion, stone visibility and price.

Plussur Crystal Bracelet Bead Size Guide: 8mm vs 10mm Explained

Moonstone Meaning: A Complete Guide to the Stone of Rhythm and Light

Moonstone is a feldspar mineral known for its adularescence — a floating light effect caused by internal light scattering. In crystal healing, moonstone is associated with intuition, emotional balance and new beginnings. It is the traditional stone of the divine...

Plussur Moonstone Meaning: A Complete Guide to the Stone of Rhythm and Light

Citrine Meaning: A Complete Guide to the Stone of Warmth and Clarity

Citrine is a yellow-to-orange variety of quartz, coloured by trace iron. Natural citrine is rare; most commercial citrine is heat-treated amethyst. In crystal healing, citrine is associated with abundance, confidence and mental clarity. It is known as the "merchant's stone."...

Plussur Citrine Meaning: A Complete Guide to the Stone of Warmth and Clarity

How to Care for Your Crystal Jewelry: Cleaning, Storage & Wear

Crystal bracelets require basic but specific care. The stone component — typically quartz at Mohs 7 — is durable and low-maintenance. The elastic cord is the part that requires the most attention: it is vulnerable to water saturation, chemical exposure...

Plussur How to Care for Your Crystal Jewelry: Cleaning, Storage & Wear

Why Crystals Are Geological Treasures

What makes heritage-grade crystals genuinely valuable — and how to tell the difference between commercial and collector-grade material.

Plussur Why Crystals Are Geological Treasures

How Crystal Colors Form: The Chemistry Behind the Stone

Trace elements, inclusions and radiation each produce different colours in crystals. Understanding the mechanism explains what you are looking at.

Plussur How Crystal Colors Form: The Chemistry Behind the Stone

Four Geological Formation Paths: How Crystals Come to Exist

The four geological processes that produce crystals — igneous, hydrothermal, metamorphic and sedimentary — each leave distinct marks on the stones they form. A guide by BE.

Plussur Four Geological Formation Paths: How Crystals Come to Exist