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Lava Rocks Gemstone Beads

Known scientifically as igneous rocks, these beads are formed from cooled volcanic lava, which solidifies into a distinctively porous and lightweight material, lending a dramatic yet manageable element to bead designs. The primary mineral composition is usually basalt, marked by its rich, dark hue that adds depth and intensity to any piece.

Facts: Lava Rocks have been esteemed for thousands of years across various cultures. From the Native Americans who believed they were the tears of Mother Earth, to the Romans who used them as talismans of strength and courage, these stones carry stories of protection and power. The deeply textured surface of these beads not only looks spectacular but also connects us to the ancient practices of honoring elemental forces.

Metaphysical / Holistic: Lava Rocks are celebrated for their grounding and stabilizing properties. Often used in crystal healing, these beads are believed to help the wearer maintain a calm, strong connection to Earth, providing stability in times of change and upheaval.

Lava Gemstone Beads for Jewelry with Natural Texture

Products: 5

Lava 8mm Round - Large Hole Beads

Original price $9.00 - Original price $9.00
Original price $9.00
$9.00 - $9.00
Current price $9.00
Login for wholesale

Lava is rock from the molten center of the earth, once spewed through fractures in the planetary crust or from a volcanic eruption. Once cooled, th...

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Original price $9.00 - Original price $9.00
Original price $9.00
$9.00 - $9.00
Current price $9.00
Login for wholesale

About this stone

Color
BlackDark Gray
Origin
IndonesiaIcelandItaly
Mohs hardness
3.5–5
Treatment categories
Natural
Industry-standard treatment
Natural — lava rock is unaltered porous volcanic basalt
Mineral chemistry
Basalt — fine-grained volcanic rock dominated by pyroxene and plagioclase feldspar
Crystal system
Mixed (volcanic glass + minerals)
Stone family
Volcanic rock
Common cuts
Round
Common sizes
6mm8mm10mm12mm
Care notes
Porous (Mohs 3.5–5) — popular for essential-oil diffuser jewelry. Mild soap and dry thoroughly; avoid soaking.
Related stones
Basalt, Obsidian, Pumice

Frequently asked questions

  • What are lava beads made of?
    Lava beads are cut from basalt, the most common volcanic rock on Earth. Basalt forms when molten lava cools rapidly at or near the surface, trapping gas bubbles in the rock as it solidifies. The porous, pitted surface you see on a lava bead is that preserved gas-bubble network — what geologists call a vesicular structure. The natural color is black to dark gray, derived from the iron and magnesium content of the basalt.
  • Are lava beads real stone, or are they molded?
    Legitimate lava beads — including every strand in Dakota's catalog — are cut from real natural basalt. The porous appearance can lead buyers to wonder if they're reconstituted or molded, but the vesicles are the original gas-bubble structure preserved from when the lava cooled. Some very-low-end material in the broader market is molded or reconstituted; that should be disclosed where it applies. Ask before buying if a strand's source isn't specified.
  • Are lava beads dyed?
    Dakota's active lava inventory is 100% natural black — the intrinsic color of basalt. The broader bead market sells dyed lava in red, white, blue, purple, green, and yellow; those bright colors are dye applied to the porous surface, which absorbs pigment readily. If a lava strand is a color other than black or dark gray, it's dyed. Treatment should be disclosed — ask before buying if it isn't specified.
  • How do lava beads work for essential oils?
    The porous structure of basalt absorbs liquids — a few drops of essential oil applied directly to a lava bead soak into the vesicles and release scent slowly over hours. Apply oil sparingly to the bead itself (not over skin or clothing); reapply when the scent fades. The bead doesn't change appearance from oil use, and the porosity recharges as oil evaporates. This is the basis of "diffuser bracelets" — designers building for that customer use lava beads as the functional scent carrier alongside smooth gemstone spacers.
  • How durable are lava beads compared to other gemstones?
    Less durable than most. Basalt is roughly Mohs 3 to 3.5 — significantly softer than chalcedony-family stones (agate, jasper, onyx at Mohs 6.5–7), and the vesicular surface makes individual beads more fragile than the mineralogy alone suggests. Beads can chip at the rim of pores under impact, and lava will not take a polish the way harder stones do. Avoid ultrasonics, aggressive solvents, and repeated impact against harder beads on the same strand. Clean with a soft cloth and minimal water.