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Yellow Calcite 6mm Round A Grade - 15-16 Inch

Original price $11.00 - Original price $11.00
Original price $11.00
$11.00 - $11.00
Current price $11.00
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Calcite is a rock-forming mineral that is extremely common and found throughout the world in sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous rocks. Calcite is the principal constituent of limestone and marble. These rocks are extremely common and make up a significant portion of Earth's crust.

SKU CAL6RD-YLW-A

Specifications

Stone type
Carbonate
Cut
Round
Bead size
6mm
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Approx. beads per strand
60
Drill style
Center-drilled
Grade
A Grade
Typical origin
MexicoUSABrazilMadagascarPakistanIceland
Mohs hardness
3
Care
Soft (Mohs 3) and reactive to acids — even mild household cleaners or perspiration can etch the polish. Soft dry cloth only; avoid ultrasonic, steam, water for long immersion. Best suited to earrings, pendants, and low-wear necklace work.
Mineral family
Carbonate

Frequently asked questions

  • How does Mohs 3 hardness affect what I can design with calcite?
    Calcite is genuinely soft at Mohs 3 — softer than a copper penny — and it cleaves in three directions, so it chips and scratches more readily than quartz-family stones. Reserve it for earrings, pendants, brooches, and necklaces that won't rub against clothing zippers or other beads. Avoid bracelets, rings, and anklets where abrasion is constant. When stringing, pair calcite with similarly soft beads or use spacer beads (metal, seed beads) to prevent harder neighbors from chipping the drill holes. Knot between beads on silk or use bead bumpers to cushion contact points.
  • Why can't I clean calcite the way I clean other gemstone beads?
    Calcium carbonate reacts with acids — even mild ones. Perspiration, citrus, vinegar, many household cleaners, and some jewelry dips will etch the polished surface, leaving dull patches that can't be buffed out at the bench. Skip ultrasonic and steam cleaners; the vibration can split cleavage planes, and heat stresses the stone. Wipe finished pieces with a soft dry cloth after wear, store separately from harder beads, and tell retail customers to apply perfume and lotion before putting calcite jewelry on. Brief contact with plain water is fine, but don't soak strands.
  • What color varieties of calcite show up in the bead trade?
    Calcite comes in a wide color range driven by trace elements and inclusions. Honey or amber calcite (iron), orange calcite (Mexico is a common source), green calcite (often Brazil), blue calcite (Madagascar, soft powdery blue), pink mangano calcite (manganese, Peru and Pakistan), and white or optical Iceland spar all appear regularly. Banded varieties marketed as Mexican onyx or marble onyx are also calcite. Some material is dyed to deepen or shift color — dye should be disclosed, and if it isn't specified, ask before buying so you can plan for fade and care accordingly.
  • What gets confused with calcite, and does it matter for my project?
    Aragonite shares the same calcium carbonate chemistry but a different crystal system; it's often sold under its own name and behaves similarly at the bench. Dolomite (calcium magnesium carbonate) is slightly harder at Mohs 3.5–4 but visually overlaps with white and pink calcite. Magnesite is harder still and is sometimes dyed to mimic turquoise rather than sold as calcite. Banded calcite is widely traded as onyx or marble — geologically distinct from black onyx (chalcedony). For design purposes, the carbonate group all share acid sensitivity and softness, so care guidance carries across; the trade name mostly affects color expectations.
  • When does dyed calcite make sense versus natural?
    Calcite takes dye well because it's porous, and dyed strands deliver saturated colors — deep blues, teals, magentas — that natural calcite doesn't produce. Dye is a legitimate choice for fashion-forward pieces, statement earrings, and color-matched designs where consistency matters more than provenance. Be aware that dye can leach with perspiration or solvent contact, and color may shift over years of light exposure. Natural calcite tones (honey, pale blue, mangano pink, optical clear) are subtler and stable. Treatment should be disclosed; if it isn't specified, ask before buying so you can set customer expectations on color longevity.