

Pink Tourmaline Bar Ring
Natural Genuine rosecut Tourmaline set in Fine Silver atop a simple round 14k Gold Filled Band.
This beautiful oval bar shapped stone has just a slight hint of peach in it’s otherwise pale pink shade.
The stone shape makes its great for stacking easily with other rings
This ring is a size 6.25
Tourmaline displays a greater range of colors than almost any other known gemstone. There is a tourmaline color that can mimic almost any other gemstone.
Tourmaline is renowned as the gem of sensitive poets and creative artists. (Shakespeare even had a small collection of tourmaline jewelry to help him overcome writer's block.) Tourmaline is believed to inspire creativity and was used extensively as a talisman by artists and writers from the Renaissance through the Victorian Age.
The rarest member of the tourmaline family is the pink tourmaline. In fact, it is even rarer than a ruby! The Empress Dowager Tz'u-hsi (tzoo-she), the last Empress of China, adored and avidly collected pink tourmaline. During her lifetime, she bought nearly a ton of it from the Himalaya Mine in California, USA. When she died, she was laid to rest among all her jewels, and her head was set upon a prized pillow of carved pink tourmaline.
Natural Genuine rosecut Tourmaline set in Fine Silver atop a simple round 14k Gold Filled Band.
This beautiful oval bar shapped stone has just a slight hint of peach in it’s otherwise pale pink shade.
The stone shape makes its great for stacking easily with other rings
This ring is a size 6.25
Tourmaline displays a greater range of colors than almost any other known gemstone. There is a tourmaline color that can mimic almost any other gemstone.
Tourmaline is renowned as the gem of sensitive poets and creative artists. (Shakespeare even had a small collection of tourmaline jewelry to help him overcome writer's block.) Tourmaline is believed to inspire creativity and was used extensively as a talisman by artists and writers from the Renaissance through the Victorian Age.
The rarest member of the tourmaline family is the pink tourmaline. In fact, it is even rarer than a ruby! The Empress Dowager Tz'u-hsi (tzoo-she), the last Empress of China, adored and avidly collected pink tourmaline. During her lifetime, she bought nearly a ton of it from the Himalaya Mine in California, USA. When she died, she was laid to rest among all her jewels, and her head was set upon a prized pillow of carved pink tourmaline.