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Crystal Time
Got my Crystal Order From Robin Today, Yay! The first pic is what I ordered and the second pic are my free gifts from Robin. I love Everything. My family of frogs is awesome...Cant say enough about the free gifts, Wow, I just love it all... Thank You @Robin Lewis Love Love Love It All 💖💖💖💖💖💖
Crystal Time
Explore with me...
If you could spend one full day exploring anywhere, would you pick: - a forest - a crystal shop - an old bookstore - a flea market - a cave - or a beach full of tide pools?
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Crystal Spotlight - Dendritic Opal
Dendritic Opal has a very quiet, reflective kind of presence. It often feels connected to stillness, observation, patience, and seeing the deeper patterns running through life. This is one of those stones that many people are drawn to during periods of introspection, emotional processing, spiritual growth, or reconnecting with nature and inner wisdom. The branch-like inclusions inside the stone almost look like tiny trees, roots, moss, or frozen landscapes. There’s something deeply symbolic about that. It tends to remind us that growth happens in layers and networks. Roots spread underground long before visible change appears above the surface. Many people work with Dendritic Opal when they are trying to slow down enough to actually hear themselves again. It has a calming, grounding quality while still holding a very intuitive and contemplative energy. Physical Overview Dendritic Opal is a common opal containing mineral inclusions called dendrites. These branching inclusions are usually made of manganese or iron oxides that naturally form tree-like or fern-like patterns inside the stone. Despite the name, the dendrites themselves are not plant material. Unlike precious opal, Dendritic Opal usually does not display strong flashes of play-of-color. Instead, its beauty comes from the contrast between the soft cream, white, gray, or beige background and the intricate natural inclusions woven throughout the material. Important deposits have been found in places such as Mexico, Madagascar, India, and parts of the western United States. Mohs hardness typically ranges around 5.5 to 6.5, so while it works beautifully in jewelry, it benefits from a little extra care to avoid scratching or cracking. Physically, many crystal practitioners associate Dendritic Opal with nervous system calming, emotional regulation, grounding, hydration awareness, and supporting overall energetic balance. Historical Usage Dendritic stones have long fascinated people because of their natural landscape-like imagery. Throughout history, stones containing dendrites were often viewed as symbols of abundance, growth, nature spirits, fertility, and connection to the Earth.
Crystal Spotlight - Dendritic Opal
Crystal Spotlight - Carnelian
Carnelian feels alive. This is the kind of stone that tends to wake people back up when they’ve been running on autopilot, emotionally flat, creatively blocked, disconnected from motivation, or stuck in fear and hesitation. There’s warmth in it. Movement. Momentum. It carries an energy that often reminds people of blood flow, sunlight, firelight, courage, passion, and the pulse of life itself. Many people are drawn to Carnelian during periods where they want to rebuild confidence, reconnect with creativity, reclaim personal power, or finally begin taking action on things they’ve delayed for too long. It has a very embodied feeling to it. Less floating in the clouds and more reconnecting with being fully present in the human experience. Carnelian often feels supportive for people who have spent a long time surviving and are now trying to remember how to actually live again. Physical Overview Carnelian is a variety of chalcedony within the quartz family. Its color comes primarily from iron inclusions, which create the rich orange, amber, rust, and deep reddish tones that make the stone so recognizable. Some pieces are translucent and glowing while others appear more earthy and dense. Major deposits have been found in places such as India, Brazil, Madagascar, and Uruguay. Mohs hardness is around 6.5 to 7, making it durable enough for jewelry, carvings, and daily carrying. Physically, many crystal workers associate Carnelian with circulation, vitality, reproductive energy, physical stamina, motivation, movement, and supporting the body during exhaustion or burnout recovery. Historical Usage Carnelian has been treasured for thousands of years across many civilizations. Ancient Egyptians worked heavily with Carnelian in jewelry, protective amulets, burial pieces, and ceremonial objects. It was associated with life force, vitality, courage, and protection in the afterlife. In Ancient Rome, Carnelian was carved into signet rings because hot wax was less likely to stick to the smooth stone. Warriors throughout various cultures also carried Carnelian as a symbol of courage, confidence, and strength before battle.
Crystal Spotlight - Carnelian
Crystal Spotlight - Botswana Agate
Botswana Agate carries a very steady, comforting kind of energy. This is one of those stones that often seems to show up during periods where life feels emotionally tangled, exhausting, or mentally heavy. There’s a softness to it, but also a quiet resilience. It reminds me of someone placing a warm blanket around your shoulders and gently saying, “Keep going. You’re going to get through this.” Its layered bands almost feel symbolic of life itself - seasons, cycles, memories, grief, growth, healing, rebuilding. Many people are drawn to Botswana Agate during times of loneliness, stress, nervous tension, or when processing old emotional wounds that keep replaying in the background. It has a grounding quality that helps slow the spiral of racing thoughts while still allowing emotions to move naturally through the body. Physical Overview Botswana Agate is a banded variety of chalcedony, which belongs to the quartz family. It forms in volcanic rock cavities over extremely long periods of time as silica-rich solutions slowly deposit microscopic layers of quartz. Those beautiful flowing bands are essentially geological snapshots of time building layer by layer. This material is most famously found in Botswana, where some of the world’s most prized specimens originate. The colors are usually soft and earthy - grays, creams, white, peach, brown, pink, and sometimes subtle lavender tones. Some pieces have intricate lace-like striping while others have broad flowing bands. Mohs hardness is around 6.5 to 7, making it durable enough for jewelry and everyday carrying. Physically, many crystal workers associate Botswana Agate with the nervous system, stress regulation, circulation, respiratory support, and helping the body settle during periods of emotional overwhelm. Historical Usage Agates have been worked with by humans for thousands of years for both adornment and practical protection. Ancient cultures throughout Africa, the Middle East, Greece, and Rome carved agates into talismans, seals, amulets, and ceremonial objects. Botswana Agate specifically became highly valued in more modern lapidary traditions because of its unusually fine banding and soothing color palette.
Crystal Spotlight - Botswana Agate
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