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Multi Color Beads

Gemstones bead strands consisting of multiple colors are a great way to add variety to a single jewelry design, try working with new color ways, or fill in missing gaps in your palette. Find strands the contain the eight chakras, mixes of various colors, or stones that are multi colored within themselves.

Round Mixed Gemstone Beads for Vibrant Jewelry Designs

Freshwater Pearl 12-15x20-25mm Multi Color Flat Baroque Beads - 15-16 Inch

Original price $25.00 - Original price $25.00
Original price $25.00
$25.00 - $25.00
Current price $25.00
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Unlike most gemstones found within the Earth, pearls are organic. Simply, they grow inside the shells of certain species of oysters and clams. Some...

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Original price $25.00 - Original price $25.00
Original price $25.00
$25.00 - $25.00
Current price $25.00
Login for wholesale

Freshwater Pearl 8-10x9-16mm Multi Color Flat Baroque Beads - 15-16 Inch

Original price $29.00 - Original price $29.00
Original price $29.00
$29.00 - $29.00
Current price $29.00
Login for wholesale

Unlike most gemstones found within the Earth, pearls are organic. Simply, they grow inside the shells of certain species of oysters and clams. Some...

View full details
Original price $29.00 - Original price $29.00
Original price $29.00
$29.00 - $29.00
Current price $29.00
Login for wholesale

About multi color beads

Color family
Mixed palettes
Shade range
Banded patternsMottled tonesMulti-color blendsPicture-stone patterning
Stones in this color
Mixed GemstoneOcean JasperJasperTourmalineQuartzTurquoiseSpiny OysterSeleniteCubic ZirconiaRose QuartzCitrineSapphire+21 more
Birthstones in this color
October (Opal, Tourmaline — both naturally multi-color)
Complements
Use a single neutral (sterling silver, black onyx, white pearl) as an anchor — multi-color stones already carry the palette. Avoid stacking with other multi-color stones unless palettes are pre-coordinated.
Typical treatments
Natural (Ocean Jasper, Tourmaline, Watermelon Tourmaline)Mixed strands (curated combinations)
Design notes
Two patterns here: stones that are naturally multi-color (Ocean Jasper, Watermelon Tourmaline, Sapphire in mixed lots) and curated 'mixed gemstone' strands. The natural multi-color stones are the design-first choice; mixed strands serve volume and budget projects.

Frequently asked questions

  • What multi-color gemstone beads do you carry?
    Two distinct types: stones that are naturally multi-color (Ocean Jasper, Watermelon Tourmaline, Picture Jasper, mixed-color Sapphire lots) and curated 'mixed gemstone' strands that combine multiple stones in a single design-coordinated strand. Mixed strands and Ocean Jasper lead by volume; specialty material includes Watermelon Tourmaline, Mookaite Jasper, and rainbow Tiger Eye.
  • What makes ocean jasper unique?
    Ocean Jasper is a single source — a now-depleted deposit from the northwestern coast of Madagascar that produces orbicular patterns of green, white, pink, yellow, and red within a single stone. The orbs (spherulites) form from radial mineral growth during slow accretion. Each strand is visually distinct and the supply is supply-constrained; expect color and pattern variation between strands of the same listing.
  • Is watermelon tourmaline real, and is it dyed?
    Yes — Watermelon Tourmaline is real, and the color is natural. The pink core and green rim form during natural growth as the chemistry of the surrounding fluid changes — pink at the start, green as the crystal grows outward. No dye is involved; the color zoning is built into the crystal structure. Slicing through a crystal produces the characteristic 'watermelon' cross-section. It is one of the more expensive tourmaline varieties.
  • Which multi-color gemstones are birthstones?
    October birthstones — Tourmaline and Opal — are both naturally multi-color in many varieties. Watermelon Tourmaline and Boulder Opal are the design-first choices in this range. Sapphire (September) also appears in 'fancy sapphire' multi-color lots when sourced from rough containing color zoning.
  • Should I use multi-color stones alongside other multi-color stones?
    Usually not. Multi-color stones already carry the palette — pairing two strong multi-color stones in a single piece typically results in visual competition that flattens both. The cleaner pattern is to anchor a multi-color focal stone (Ocean Jasper, Watermelon Tourmaline) with a single neutral (sterling silver, black onyx, white pearl) that lets the focal do the work. Mixed strands serve volume and budget projects.