Diopside 4mm Faceted Round AAA Grade - 15-16 Inch
Original price
$59.00
-
Original price
$59.00
Original price
$59.00
$59.00
-
$59.00
Diopside is a calcium and magnesium silicate mineral. It is transparent or translucent, and can display a nearly emerald green color due to the presence of Chromium within the stone. It is believed to increase one’s metaphysical connection with the earth.
SKU DIO4RD-F-AAA
Specifications
Stone type
Pyroxene
Cut
Faceted round
Bead size
4mm
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Approx. beads per strand
100
Drill style
Center-drilled
Grade
AAA Grade
Typical origin
Russia (Siberia)PakistanIndiaMadagascar
Mohs hardness
5.5–6.5
Care
Moderate hardness (Mohs 5.5–6.5). Mild soap and soft cloth; avoid ultrasonic.
Mineral family
Pyroxene
Frequently asked questions
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What color range should I expect from diopside beads?
The variety stocked in the bead trade is chrome diopside, which runs from a clean medium green to a deep forest or near-black green. Russian (Siberian) material tends toward the saturated emerald-leaning end, while material from Pakistan, India, and Madagascar can skew darker or more olive. Smaller calibrated sizes (2–4mm) read brighter because light passes through more easily; 8–10mm rounds often appear noticeably darker in hand. If color tone matters for a colorway, check the product photography against a neutral background and request additional images if the listing doesn't show the strand clearly. -
Is chrome diopside typically treated?
Chrome diopside is one of the few saturated green stones that reaches market untreated — no heat, no dye, no oiling is standard in the trade. The color comes from natural chromium content in the crystal structure. Treatment status should still be disclosed for any specific strand; ask before buying if it isn't listed. Because the color is intrinsic rather than surface-applied, it won't fade with normal wear or light exposure the way dyed greens can. -
How does diopside compare to peridot, tsavorite, and emerald?
All four are green silicates but behave differently at the bead scale. Peridot (Mohs 6.5–7) is more yellow-green and slightly harder. Tsavorite garnet is rarer in bead form and brighter, with higher refractive index. Emerald beads are usually heavily included and oiled. Chrome diopside sits between peridot and emerald in tone — cooler than peridot, less blue than fine emerald — and is the most affordable saturated green at strand-level pricing. In faceted rounds and microfaceted cuts, diopside delivers visible sparkle that mimics the look of finer green stones at a working designer's budget. -
What jewelry projects suit diopside best?
Mohs 5.5–6.5 places diopside in earring, necklace, and bracelet territory rather than daily-wear rings. Microfaceted and faceted rounds in 2–4mm work well as accent runs alongside gold-fill or sterling, layered necklaces, and bridal-adjacent pieces where a saturated green reads as an emerald substitute. Larger 8–10mm smooth rounds suit statement strands and malas. Diopside pairs cleanly with freshwater pearl, labradorite, moonstone, garnet, and warm metals — the cool green provides contrast without competing. Avoid settings that put the bead under repeated impact. -
How should finished diopside pieces be cleaned and stored?
Clean with mild soap, lukewarm water, and a soft cloth or soft brush; rinse and pat dry. Skip ultrasonic and steam cleaners — diopside has distinct cleavage planes and moderate hardness, so vibration can propagate internal fractures, especially in faceted beads where edges concentrate stress. Avoid prolonged exposure to harsh household chemicals, chlorinated pools, and abrasive polishing compounds. Store separately from harder stones (quartz, topaz, corundum) to prevent surface scratching. For strung pieces, restring periodically if worn often, as silk and nylon cord fatigue independently of the beads.