Kyanite Gemstone Beads
Kyanite, with its striking blue shades ranging from aqua to deep navy, is a gemstone of beauty and strength. It primarily comprises aluminum silicate and forms during the metamorphic processes within clay-rich sediments. What sets Kyanite apart is its anisotropic nature, meaning it has different hardness ratings on its perpendicular axes.
Facts: Kyanite has been revered through the ages, finding its place in a wide array of historical contexts. Esteemed for its vivid color and glassy luster, it has historically symbolized clarity, connection, and tranquility in various cultures. The stone's name itself, stemming from the Greek word 'kyanos' meaning 'deep blue', hints at its illustrious connections with the sea and sky, often used by voyagers and explorers as a navigational aid.
Metaphysical / Holistic: Kyanite is often associated with the throat chakra, making it a powerful stone for communication. It is believed to aid in speaking one's truth with clarity and to promote quick-thinking, qualities essential for effective interactions and personal expression.
Products: 25
Green Kyanite 3x4mm Rondelle Faceted AA Grade - 15-16 Inch
Kyanite often occurs as long, bladed, striated crystals, transparent or translucent with a pearly luster. An aluminum silicate mineral, it may appe...
View full detailsKyanite 2-3x3-4mm Faceted Rondelle - 15-16 Inch
Kyanite often occurs as long, bladed, striated crystals, transparent or translucent with a pearly luster. An aluminum silicate mineral, it may appe...
View full detailsBlue Nepal Kyanite 3x6-5x8mm Grauated Faceted Rondelle Necklace - 15-16 Inch
Kyanite often occurs as long, bladed, striated crystals, transparent or translucent with a pearly luster. An aluminum silicate mineral, it may appe...
View full detailsBlue Nepal Kyanite 2x4-3x5mm Graduated Faceted Rondelle Necklace - 15-16 Inch
Kyanite often occurs as long, bladed, striated crystals, transparent or translucent with a pearly luster. An aluminum silicate mineral, it may appe...
View full detailsMoss Kyanite 2x5-5x8mm Graduated Faceted Rondelle Necklace - 15-16 Inch
Kyanite often occurs as long, bladed, striated crystals, transparent or translucent with a pearly luster. An aluminum silicate mineral, it may appe...
View full detailsTeal Kyanite 2x4mm Faceted Rondelle Nacklace - 15-16 Inch
Kyanite often occurs as long, bladed, striated crystals, transparent or translucent with a pearly luster. An aluminum silicate mineral, it may appe...
View full detailsKyanite 3-5mm Graduated Faceted Rondelle - 15-16 Inch
Kyanite often occurs as long, bladed, striated crystals, transparent or translucent with a pearly luster. An aluminum silicate mineral, it may appe...
View full detailsAbout this stone
Frequently asked questions
-
Is kyanite dyed or natural?
Both — and the split in our active catalog is close to even (roughly 11 natural and 9 dyed across 42 active SKUs). Natural kyanite is most commonly blue, ranging from pale streaky aqua to deep navy, often patchy within a single bead. Dyed kyanite typically deepens or unifies the blue, brings out the green, or produces the occasional bright color (vivid orange is a dye signal — natural kyanite doesn't reach that saturation). Treatment should be disclosed per strand — ask before buying if it isn't specified. -
Is green kyanite real?
Yes — chromium-bearing kyanite produces a real, natural green, and Dakota carries 8 active green kyanite SKUs. The bead trade also dyes kyanite green, so both natural-green and dyed-green strands exist in the market. Per-strand treatment disclosure is the only reliable way to know which is which. -
How durable is kyanite for jewelry?
Kyanite has anisotropic hardness — Mohs 4.5–5 along the length of the crystal and 6.5–7 across it — which means it cleaves more easily than its upper number suggests. In practical terms, treat it as a soft-to-medium stone: it works well in earrings, necklaces, and bracelets where impact is incidental, but it is not a ring stone for daily wear. String with some slack rather than crimping at high tension across a kyanite bead, and avoid ultrasonic and steam cleaning — especially on dyed material. -
Why does kyanite have striations or cleavage lines?
Those lines are the crystal's natural cleavage planes showing through. Kyanite forms as long, bladed crystals, and the same anisotropic structure that produces its split-hardness rating also produces the lengthwise striations you see on many strands. It is a characteristic of the mineral, not a flaw — many designers reach for kyanite specifically because the striations and patchy color give the stone a distinctive crystalline texture. -
Where does kyanite come from?
Kyanite is mined in several countries — Brazil, Nepal, Switzerland, Russia, and the United States are commonly cited sources, with significant deposits also in India, Kenya, and Tanzania. Most bead-trade kyanite carries no specific origin disclosure from the supplier, so origin should be disclosed only when verifiable — ask before buying if origin is part of your design specification.