Elisa Turquoise 5-13mm Graduated Rounds - 15-16 Inch
Original price
$550.00
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Original price
$550.00
Original price
$550.00
$550.00
-
$550.00
This turquoise is mined from the Sonora mines in Mexico. Like all other natural turquoise, its coloring is the result of the chemical reaction that occurs when copper is introduced to water.
These stones have unique green pigmentation when compared to other turquoise sourced from the region, which tends to be a strong blue color. These mines are also famous for sourcing North-American Jasper, an elusive stone with unique coloring. The mines these stones are sourced from are primarily copper mines, and turquoise is a leftover mineral from these practices.
SKU TQSELI5-13RD-GRAD-SHOW
Specifications
Stone type
Turquoise
Bead size
13mm
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Approx. beads per strand
29
Treatment
Natural
Typical origin
USA (Arizona)USA (Nevada)China (Hubei)MexicoIran
Mohs hardness
5–6
Care
Avoid ultrasonic, steam, bleach, and household cleaners. Soft damp cloth only. Remove before swimming, gym, perfume, hand-washing.
Mineral family
Turquoise
Frequently asked questions
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Is this real turquoise or a dyed substitute?
Material sold under the Turquoise name in this collection is hydrated copper-aluminum phosphate — the genuine mineral. The bead trade also sells dyed howlite and dyed magnesite under names like 'white turquoise' or 'turquenite,' which are not turquoise. Dyed quartz and reconstituted blocks also circulate. If a strand is composite (reconstituted from turquoise powder and binder) or block-pressed, that should be noted in the product title or specifications. When the descriptor is just 'Turquoise' with a stated treatment (natural or stabilized), you are buying the mineral itself — ask before purchase if anything is unclear. -
What does 'stabilized' mean for turquoise, and is it expected?
Stabilization is the industry standard for most turquoise on the market. Raw turquoise is porous and often chalky; stabilization infuses the stone with a clear resin or polymer to harden it, lock in color, and make it workable as beads without crumbling at the drill hole. Stabilized turquoise is still turquoise — only the porosity is filled. Untreated natural turquoise exists but is uncommon in calibrated bead strands and priced accordingly. Composite or reconstituted material is a separate category and should be labeled as such. Treatment should be disclosed; ask before buying if it isn't specified. -
How do origin and color vary across Dakota's turquoise?
Hubei (China) turquoise runs from sky blue to robin's-egg with brown or black matrix and is the most consistent in calibrated bead sizes. Arizona material (Sleeping Beauty type and Kingman type) tends toward clean blue with reddish-brown or no matrix. Nevada turquoise often shows green tones and spiderweb matrix. Iranian (Persian) turquoise is classic sky blue, sometimes with golden limonite matrix. Mexican turquoise varies widely. Origin should be noted in the product title or specifications when known — color and matrix vary strand to strand even within one mine, so pictured strands are representative. -
How do I care for turquoise in finished jewelry?
Turquoise sits at 5–6 on Mohs and is chemically reactive — it absorbs oils, perfumes, lotions, sweat, and chlorinated water, which can turn blue stones green or dull the surface permanently. Stabilized strands tolerate handling better than untreated, but care is the same: wipe with a soft, slightly damp cloth and dry immediately. No ultrasonic, no steam, no bleach, no jewelry dips. Remove before swimming, the gym, hand-washing, and applying fragrance or sunscreen. Earrings and necklaces wear better long-term than rings or bracelets, which take more abrasion and skin contact. -
What scale and cut works best for turquoise in design?
Small rounds (3–4mm) and microfaceted rounds read as classic accent strands and pair cleanly with sterling, gold-fill, coral, lapis, and pearl. Heishi and tyre cuts give the Southwest profile and stack well with sterling spacers. Pebble and nugget shapes show off matrix patterning and work for statement pieces where each bead reads individually. Cubes and rondelles bridge between geometric and organic looks. Because color and matrix vary across mines and even across one strand, designers stringing multi-strand or graduated pieces should buy enough material from a single order to keep the palette consistent.