Mookite Gemchip Bracelet
Mookite Gemchip Bracelet
Pretty little Mookite gemchip bracelet - a convenient and inexpensive way to bring the energy of Mookite into your life that looks good and can enhance your outfit! They look great stacked in pairs or sets of three. You will receive the bracelet or bracelets in a white voile pouch with flower petals, making a lovely inexpensive gift for yourself or a friend.
These bracelets are made from small crystal chips strung onto elastic for a flexible and easy fit. They are a standard size, durable and good value.
These bracelets are our 'standard stock' and we usually have several available. They all pass Sue's quality test, but since they are natural stones there will be some variation in appearance. You may not receive the item in the photograph.
Mookite is also known as mookite jasper, mookaite, moukite, and there are many other ways of spelling it too. It is named for Mooka Creek in Western Australia, where it is found. Mookaite is a sedimentary rock, formed initially from many tiny sea creatures when the land area was beneath the sea. When the sea levels fell, these sediments, with the addition of silica, became solid rock.
Mookite has been found in many colours, including red, maroon, purple, brown-orange, pale yellow, mustard, ivory, white and pink. Occasionally it has black dendrites – these are valued for creating beautiful cabochons for jewellery.
I have read many descriptions of Mookite which claim that it is a grounding stone, but this is not my experience at all.
While Mookite has some of the stability of Jasper (as I know it) it also has a strong sense of lightness – a very high spirituality – and lots of movement.
I feel that this stone can help us to adjust to the changes and bring support in these transformative times, as we release old patterns and move into the new. The energies are exhilarating for some, turbulent for others, and Mookite will help to bring peace when help is needed.
Please note:
The elastic will eventually perish if worn daily in the shower, and I’ve broken several by catching them on my kitchen doorknobs and snapping the elastic, so do take reasonable care.