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Emerald Gemstone Beads

Emerald gemstone beads are renowned for their rich, vibrant green color, deriving from trace amounts of chromium and sometimes vanadium within the beryl mineral. Geologically fascinating, Emeralds are formed under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions, making them not only beautiful but also a testament to nature's powerful geological processes. As part of the beryl family, they possess a hardness of 7.5 to 8 on the Mohs scale.

Facts: Emeralds have captivated human imagination and adorned various cultures for thousands of years. In ancient mythology and history, Emeralds were believed to be the gemstone of Venus, the goddess of love and beauty. This association imbued the stone with symbols of fertility and rebirth. Cleopatra was famously known for her passion for Emeralds, and used them prominently in her royal adornments.

Metaphysical / Holistic: Emeralds are said to promote mental clarity and to strengthen memory and wisdom. They are often associated with the Heart Chakra, enhancing love and compassion in one's life.

Emerald 2-4mm Banded Irregular Rondelle - 14 Inch

Original price $44.00 - Original price $44.00
Original price $44.00
$44.00 - $44.00
Current price $44.00
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Emerald is one of the four “precious” gemstones, the others being Diamond, Ruby and Sapphire. It is the green form of Beryl, colored by trace amoun...

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Original price $44.00 - Original price $44.00
Original price $44.00
$44.00 - $44.00
Current price $44.00
Login for wholesale

Emerald 2-5mm Banded Irregular Rondelle - 15-16 Inch

Original price $56.00 - Original price $56.00
Original price $56.00
$56.00 - $56.00
Current price $56.00
Login for wholesale

Emerald is one of the four “precious” gemstones, the others being Diamond, Ruby and Sapphire. It is the green form of Beryl, colored by trace amoun...

View full details
Original price $56.00 - Original price $56.00
Original price $56.00
$56.00 - $56.00
Current price $56.00
Login for wholesale

About this stone

Color
GreenBluish-GreenYellowish-Green
Origin
ColombiaZambiaBrazilEthiopiaAfghanistan
Mohs hardness
7.5–8
Treatment categories
Oiled (Minor)Oiled (Moderate)Oiled (Significant)Natural/Untreated
Industry-standard treatment
Oiling / resin filling (FTC-required disclosure)
Mineral chemistry
Beryllium aluminum silicate (beryl) colored by chromium and/or vanadium
Crystal system
Hexagonal
Stone family
Beryl
Birthstone
May
Common cuts
Faceted RondelleSmooth RoundRough-Cut TumbledMicrofaceted Round
Common sizes
2mm3mm4mm6mm
Care notes
Avoid ultrasonic, steam, and solvents — oiling is not permanent and harsh cleaning can remove it. Soft cloth and mild soap only.
Related stones
Aquamarine, Morganite, Tsavorite Garnet

Frequently asked questions

  • Is your emerald real, or is it dyed quartz?
    Emerald is chromium/vanadium-colored green beryl. The bead trade has several common imitation problems: dyed green quartz, dyed howlite, dyed glass, synthetic / lab-created / hydrothermal emerald, and very saturated green beryl mislabeled as emerald. If a strand looks too bright, too clean, and too cheap to be real emerald, it's probably one of these. Mineral identity, origin, and oiling tier should be disclosed — ask before buying if a listing doesn't specify any of these.
  • Is the emerald oiled?
    Yes, almost certainly — more than 95% of emerald in the global market is oiled or resin-filled to fill surface-reaching fractures. This is industry-standard, FTC-required to disclose, and not a quality knock. The GIA framework labels strands as **Minor** (one or two fissures filled), **Moderate** (multiple fissures filled, the most common bead-grade tier), or **Significant** (many fissures filled, the strand reads cleaner than the underlying rough). Oiling tier should be disclosed — ask before buying if it isn't specified. Untreated / no-oil emerald is rare even in fine jewelry and almost nonexistent in bead form.
  • What's the difference between Colombian and Zambian emerald?
    Colombian emerald comes from calcite-and-shale-vein deposits (Muzo, Chivor, Coscuez) and shows the classic bright, slightly bluish-green that defines "emerald green" in popular imagination — typically the brightest and most transparent register. Zambian emerald comes from mica-schist deposits (Kagem and others); higher iron content gives it a deeper, slightly cooler bluish-green with often-better clarity, meaning Zambian strands are sometimes less heavily oiled. Colombian is recognized for color register; Zambian is recognized for saturation and structural integrity.
  • Is emerald the same as green beryl?
    No, not exactly. Both are beryl. Emerald is beryl colored green by significant chromium and/or vanadium content — saturated enough that the trade and most labs call it emerald. Green beryl is the same mineral with low or no chromium/vanadium, producing a paler green that doesn't meet the saturation threshold. Emerald and green beryl are sold as separate categories in disclosure-conscious catalogs; if you're seeing pale-green strands marketed as "emerald" elsewhere, they're often green beryl mislabeled. Mineral identity should be disclosed — confirm if it isn't there.
  • Why is your bead-grade emerald less expensive than I expected?
    Bead-grade emerald is a different category from gem-grade emerald. The transparent, eye-clean material cut for fine jewelry is fundamentally rarer than the opaque-to-translucent rough used for bead strands, and gem-grade pricing dynamics don't transfer. Bead-grade gives designers access to beryl at sizes (2mm–6mm) and per-strand prices that work in production.