Pink Opal 3x6-5x7mm Chip - 15-16 Inch
Original price
$10.00
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Original price
$10.00
Original price
$10.00
$10.00
-
$10.00
Pink Opal is a variety of non to precious opal, meaning that it has lustre and some translucency without the fire or color play associated with precious opal varieties. Pink Opal naturally occurs in shades of extremely pale to deeper pink.
Metaphysically, Pink Opal is said to aid in the productivity of new endeavors.
Metaphysically, Pink Opal is said to aid in the productivity of new endeavors.
SKU PKO3-7CHP
Specifications
Stone type
Opal
Cut
Chip
Strand length
15-16 Inch
Drill style
Drilled (irregular axis)
Treatment
Natural
Typical origin
Peru (Andes)
Mohs hardness
5.5–6.5
Care
Moderate hardness (Mohs 5.5–6.5). Avoid ultrasonic, steam, dry/hot environments; mild soap and soft cloth.
Mineral family
Opal
Frequently asked questions
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Is Peruvian pink opal the same as precious opal?
No. Pink opal from Peru is a common opal — a hydrated amorphous silica (SiO2·nH2O) that displays a soft, uniform pink body color without the play-of-color (flash, fire) associated with precious opal. The pink hue typically comes from trace palygorskite or organic compounds rather than internal silica microstructure. Common opal is opaque to translucent and reads as a solid color, which is why it strings well for designers wanting a calm, matte-to-glossy pink without the visual movement of black or white precious opal. Mineralogically it's still genuine opal, just the non-iridescent variety the Andes are known for. -
How should I care for pink opal in finished jewelry?
Opal is hydrated silica and holds structural water, so the main risks are heat, dryness, and impact. At Mohs 5.5–6.5 pink opal is softer than quartz and can scratch against harder stones in a bead box or on the wrist. Avoid ultrasonic cleaners, steam, prolonged sun, hot cars, and low-humidity environments that can encourage crazing (fine surface cracks). Clean with mild soap and a soft cloth — no solvents, no jewelry dips. It suits earrings, necklaces, and occasional-wear bracelets better than daily-wear rings, where abrasion and knocks accumulate quickly. -
What treatments are typical for pink opal beads?
Peruvian pink opal is most often sold untreated — the pink color is natural to the material. Some strands may be lightly waxed or oiled at the polishing stage, which is standard for porous stones and not considered a color treatment. Dyeing is uncommon for this variety because the natural pink is already marketable, but very pale rough is occasionally enhanced. Treatment status should appear on the individual listing — ask before buying if it isn't specified, particularly if you're matching strands across reorders where natural color variation between batches is normal. -
What projects does pink opal work best in?
The soft, opaque pink and matte-leaning polish make pink opal a natural fit for romantic, bridal, and pastel palettes. It pairs cleanly with sterling and rose gold, and sits well next to moonstone, rose quartz, pearl, labradorite, and rutilated quartz without competing visually. Smaller rounds (4–6mm) suit delicate layering necklaces, wrap bracelets, and earring drops; 8–10mm rounds anchor statement strands and mala-style designs. Chips and pebble cuts work for textural multi-strand bracelets. Because the color is muted rather than saturated, pink opal reads as sophisticated rather than candy-pink — useful when you want pink that isn't juvenile. -
How do I tell pink opal from dyed howlite or pink magnesite?
Dyed howlite and magnesite are the most common imitators in the bead trade. Pink opal shows a slightly waxy-to-vitreous luster and a uniform body color that runs through the bead, occasionally with subtle white or gray matrix veining native to Andean material. Dyed howlite usually displays the characteristic gray spiderweb veining of natural howlite with color concentrated near the surface and along the drill hole. Pink magnesite tends to show a chalkier, more porous surface. Pink opal is also denser in hand and slightly harder (5.5–6.5 vs howlite's 3.5). When in doubt, the drill hole is the tell — dye pooling there is a giveaway.