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Bronzite 6mm Hexagon - 15-16 Inch

Original price $31.00 - Original price $31.00
Original price $31.00
$31.00 - $31.00
Current price $31.00
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Bronzite is a brown stone with a bronze to colored metallic luster due to iron deposits within the stone. An orthoproxene mineral, it is believed to be a grounding stone that promotes certainty, decision making and creative thinking.

SKU BRZ6HEX

Specifications

Stone type
Pyroxene
Cut
Hexagon
Bead size
6mm
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Approx. beads per strand
60
Drill style
Center-drilled (face to face)
Treatment
Natural
Typical origin
IndiaBrazilSouth Africa
Mohs hardness
5–6
Care
Moderate hardness (Mohs 5–6). Avoid ultrasonic; mild soap and soft cloth.
Mineral family
Pyroxene

Frequently asked questions

  • What gives bronzite its characteristic metallic shimmer?
    Bronzite's signature bronze-gold sheen, called schiller, comes from light reflecting off thin parallel inclusions of iron-rich minerals within the crystal structure. Bronzite is a magnesium iron silicate in the pyroxene group, closely related to enstatite and hypersthene. The schiller effect is most visible on smooth rounds and cabochon-style cuts where polished surfaces catch the light at varying angles. Faceted cuts can fragment the shimmer, while large smooth beads showcase it best. Color ranges from warm tan-brown to deep chocolate, often with greenish or reddish undertones depending on iron content and origin. The effect is natural to the mineral, not a coating or treatment.
  • Is bronzite typically treated or dyed?
    Bronzite is generally sold untreated — the bronze schiller and earthy color are natural properties of the mineral. It's not commonly dyed or stabilized because the material takes a good polish on its own and color enhancement isn't needed to make it marketable. That said; ask before buying if it isn't specified. Occasionally bronzite is sealed with a light wax or oil to deepen the polish, which is a finishing step rather than a structural treatment. Avoid bleach, acetone, and prolonged solvent exposure, which can dull the surface luster regardless of treatment.
  • What jewelry projects suit bronzite best?
    Bronzite's warm metallic tone makes it a strong neutral for masculine designs, layered boho strands, and earth-palette work where you want shimmer without the saturated color of tiger eye. It pairs well with matte black onyx, hematite, jasper, copper findings, antiqued brass, and leather. The 6mm and 8mm rounds Dakota stocks work for stretch bracelets and multi-strand necklaces; 10mm and barrel cuts suit statement men's bracelets and mala-style designs; 2x4mm heishi adds texture as spacers between larger focal beads. Because the schiller reads as a soft metallic, bronzite bridges stone and metal in mixed-media pieces without competing with chain or wire.
  • How should finished bronzite jewelry be cared for?
    At Mohs 5–6, bronzite is softer than quartz and will scuff if it rubs against harder stones or rough surfaces. It's well-suited to earrings, necklaces, and occasional-wear bracelets but isn't ideal for daily-wear rings where impact and abrasion are constant. Clean with mild soap, lukewarm water, and a soft cloth. Skip ultrasonic and steam cleaners — the cleavage planes that produce the schiller can also be points of weakness under vibration. Store bronzite separately from harder stones like quartz, topaz, or corundum to prevent surface scratches that dull the metallic sheen over time.
  • How is bronzite different from hypersthene and tiger iron?
    Bronzite, hypersthene, and enstatite are all members of the orthopyroxene series and sit on a compositional continuum — bronzite is the magnesium-rich end with golden-bronze schiller, while hypersthene contains more iron and tends toward darker gray-black with silvery or reddish flash. They're sometimes sold interchangeably in the bead trade. Tiger iron is a different material entirely: a banded composite of tiger eye, hematite, and red jasper, with distinct stripes rather than bronzite's uniform shimmer. If you need consistency across a production run, order from one batch — schiller intensity and base color shift between origins (India, Brazil, South Africa) and even between rough lots.