Crazy Lace Agate 8mm Round - 15-16 Inch
Original price
$15.00
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Original price
$15.00
Original price
$15.00
$15.00
-
$15.00
Crazy Lace Agate is a banded Chalcedony that naturally occurs as golden brown with layers of pink, red and gray in swirling circular patterns. It has been called “the Laughter Stone” or “Happy Lace” for its believed power to elevate thoughts and promote optimism. Agate has been discovered with artifacts from cultures of the Neolithic Period, also known as the Stone Age, occurring 10,000 years ago.
SKU CLA8RD
Specifications
Stone type
Chalcedony
Cut
Round
Bead size
8mm
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Approx. beads per strand
45
Drill style
Center-drilled
Typical origin
Mexico (Chihuahua)
Mohs hardness
6.5–7
Care
Durable (Mohs 6.5–7). Mild soap and soft cloth; avoid ultrasonics on dyed strands to preserve dye stability.
Mineral family
Chalcedony
Frequently asked questions
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What gives Crazy Lace Agate its swirling banded pattern?
Crazy Lace Agate is a banded chalcedony (microcrystalline quartz) from Chihuahua, Mexico, where iron and aluminum inclusions formed tight, looping bands during slow silica deposition in volcanic host rock. The result is the chaotic lacework of whites, creams, reds, yellows, and grays the trade calls 'crazy lace.' Pattern density and color range vary cut to cut — even within a single strand, no two beads will match. For projects that depend on visual consistency (matched pairs for earrings, graduated necklaces), plan to buy enough strand length to cherry-pick beads, since pattern variation is intrinsic to the material, not a defect. -
Is Crazy Lace Agate ever dyed, and how do I tell?
Most Crazy Lace from Chihuahua shows naturally vivid color and isn't dyed, but dyed strands do circulate — usually pushed toward saturated reds, pinks, or purples that look uniform across the bead rather than concentrated in bands. Natural material shows color confined to the lacework patterning with neutral host chalcedony around it; dyed material tends to tint the whole bead. Treatment should appear on the product page — ask before buying if it isn't specified. If your project needs colorfast material for pieces that see sun or sweat exposure, confirm natural status before stringing. -
What kind of jewelry does Crazy Lace Agate work best in?
The busy patterning makes Crazy Lace a statement stone — it carries a design on its own without needing much support. Larger rounds (10mm, 12mm) and coins or ovals show the lacework off best and work well as focal beads or single-strand necklaces. Smaller sizes (4mm, 6mm) read more as warm earth tones from a distance and pair well with metal spacers or solid-color accent beads (carnelian, jasper, matte onyx) that won't compete with the pattern. Because color varies bead-to-bead, mixed-size designs and asymmetric layouts tend to flatter the material more than rigid symmetry. -
How durable is it for rings and bracelets?
At Mohs 6.5–7, Crazy Lace Agate sits in the same durability range as other chalcedony agates — fine for bracelets, necklaces, and earrings under normal wear, and workable for rings if the setting protects the stone. The chalcedony structure resists chipping better than many softer stones, but sharp impacts can still fracture beads along bedding planes. Clean with mild soap and a soft cloth. Skip ultrasonic and steam cleaners on any dyed strand to keep dye stable, and avoid prolonged exposure to bleach, acetone, or strong solvents that can dull the polish over time. -
How is it different from Botswana Agate or Moss Agate?
All three are chalcedony agates, but the patterning is distinct. Botswana Agate shows tight parallel banding in grays, pinks, and creams — orderly stripes rather than swirls. Moss Agate is translucent chalcedony with green or black dendritic (plant-like) inclusions floating in clear material, not banded at all. Crazy Lace is defined by chaotic looping bands in warm earth tones — reds, golds, whites, and browns — packed densely across the bead. If a strand labeled 'crazy lace' shows orderly parallel stripes or dendritic moss inclusions, it's likely been mislabeled in the trade.