Labradorite

Stone of shimmering internal worlds

First recorded by the Inuit along the Labrador coast, its fire was seen as a fragment of the aurora housed in stone. Geologically, it forms in ancient anorthosite, rock created more than a billion years ago, the same family of stones that make up much of the lunar highlands on the moon.

It's shifting colours reveal thin internal layers that catch and scatter light, a natural phenomenon called labradorescence. These layers create a sense of movement, as though the stone carries its own inner sky.

Labradorite supports moments of transition. It encourages intuition, clarity, and the soft recognition of inner truth. A stone for those who walk between worlds and move with intention through change.