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White Howlite 7x8mm Faceted Swirl Oval - 15-16 Inch

Original price $18.00 - Original price $18.00
Original price $18.00
$18.00 - $18.00
Current price $18.00
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White Howlite is named for Canadian mineralogist Henry How, who first discovered the stone in Southern California in 1868. It is typically white or light gray with gray, black or brown veins running through it in web to like patterns. Because of its softness, Howlite can be easily dyed and is often treated to be blue for use as a substitute for turquoise.

SKU WHT7x8OV-SWRL-F

Specifications

Stone type
Borate
Cut
Oval
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Drill style
Center-drilled (lengthwise)
Typical origin
USACanada (Nova Scotia)MexicoRussia
Mohs hardness
3.5
Care
Soft (Mohs 3.5). Avoid ultrasonic, steam, harsh chemicals; mild soap and soft cloth only. Dyed material can transfer color with solvents.
Mineral family
Borate

Frequently asked questions

  • Is howlite often sold as turquoise, and how do I tell them apart?
    Yes — dyed blue howlite is the most common turquoise substitute in the bead trade, sometimes labeled 'white turquoise,' 'buffalo turquoise,' or 'white buffalo' (separate from genuine White Buffalo stone from Nevada). Natural howlite is chalk-white with grey or black web-like veining; turquoise shows a harder, waxier surface and more varied matrix. Howlite is also much softer (Mohs 3.5 vs turquoise at 5–6) and will scratch with a steel pin where turquoise resists. If a strand is described as turquoise at a howlite-like price point, ask for mineral identification before buying.
  • Will dyed howlite fade or transfer color onto findings and skin?
    Dyed howlite is porous and the dye sits in surface fractures and the stone's natural webbing, so color can shift with prolonged UV exposure, solvent contact (acetone, alcohol-based cleaners, perfume), or aggressive polishing compounds. Color transfer onto skin or light-colored thread is uncommon with cured commercial dye but possible if the strand was recently dyed or wiped with solvent. For finished pieces, keep dyed howlite away from jewelry cleaners and store out of direct sunlight. Whether a specific strand is dyed or natural should be disclosed — ask before buying if it isn't specified.
  • What kinds of jewelry is howlite best suited for?
    At Mohs 3.5, howlite belongs in low-impact pieces — earrings, pendants, layering necklaces, and bracelets that come off before manual work or gym sessions. It's a poor choice for rings and unsuitable for daily-wear bangles that knock against hard surfaces. The chalky white base with grey veining reads well as a neutral against silver, oxidized metals, and other matrix stones like turquoise or pyrite. Larger smooth rounds (10–14mm) and nuggets work for statement pieces; 4–6mm rounds spacer well between harder accent stones in beaded designs.
  • How should finished howlite pieces be cleaned?
    Mild soap, lukewarm water, and a soft cloth only. Skip ultrasonic and steam cleaners — both can drive water into the stone's microfractures and, in dyed material, leach color. Avoid commercial jewelry dips, ammonia, and alcohol-based cleaners. For tarnished metal findings strung with howlite, polish the metal off the strand or use a dry polishing cloth that won't contact the beads. Dry the beads thoroughly before storage and keep pieces away from prolonged sunlight, which can dull both natural and dyed howlite over time.
  • What's the difference between howlite and magnesite in the bead trade?
    Both are soft white stones (Mohs 3.5–4) commonly dyed and sold as turquoise substitutes, so they get mixed up routinely. Howlite is a calcium borosilicate with characteristic spider-web grey or black veining and a slightly translucent, porcelain-like surface. Magnesite is a magnesium carbonate, typically denser-looking with coarser, more crackled veining and a flatter matte finish when polished. Performance in jewelry is similar — both take dye readily, both need gentle care, both work for low-impact pieces. If the distinction matters for a specific project, the mineral identity should be specified.