Discover the extraordinary colour range of natural tourmalines — from electric Paraíba blues to vivid chrome greens, hot pinks, and striking bi-colours. No two tourmalines are alike.
Tourmalines are nature's most colourful gemstone family, occurring in virtually every hue imaginable. The genus includes some of the world's most sought-after collector's gems — the neon-blue Paraíba tourmaline, the deep-green chrome tourmaline, the vivid-pink rubellite, and the striking watermelon tourmaline with its pink core and green rind.
Brazil is the foremost source of tourmaline, producing Paraíba, rubellite, and bi-colour varieties. Mozambique and Nigeria have emerged as significant producers of high-quality material. Our collection spans the full spectrum, from affordable indicolites to investment-grade Paraíba tourmalines.
Paraíba tourmalines from Brazil (and secondarily Mozambique and Nigeria) are the rarest and most valuable, with the finest Brazilian specimens fetching tens of thousands of pounds per carat.
Yes — tourmalines measure 7–7.5 on the Mohs scale, making them suitable for occasional-wear rings and ideal for pendants, earrings, and brooches.
Discover the extraordinary colour range of natural tourmalines — from electric Paraíba blues to vivid chrome greens, hot pinks, and striking bi-colours. No two tourmalines are alike.
Tourmalines are nature's most colourful gemstone family, occurring in virtually every hue imaginable. The genus includes some of the world's most sought-after collector's gems — the neon-blue Paraíba tourmaline, the deep-green chrome tourmaline, the vivid-pink rubellite, and the striking watermelon tourmaline with its pink core and green rind.
Brazil is the foremost source of tourmaline, producing Paraíba, rubellite, and bi-colour varieties. Mozambique and Nigeria have emerged as significant producers of high-quality material. Our collection spans the full spectrum, from affordable indicolites to investment-grade Paraíba tourmalines.
Paraíba tourmalines from Brazil (and secondarily Mozambique and Nigeria) are the rarest and most valuable, with the finest Brazilian specimens fetching tens of thousands of pounds per carat.
Yes — tourmalines measure 7–7.5 on the Mohs scale, making them suitable for occasional-wear rings and ideal for pendants, earrings, and brooches.