Nox Stella Necklace
Nox Stella Necklace
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Premium Stones
Globally Sourced
Handmade Jewellery
Unique Designs
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Returns
Returns
If you're unhappy with your purchase, we'll find a solution for you. Most of our products can be returned within 7 days. Returns will be refunded to the original payment method or as a store credit. We do our best to make you comfortable, because let's face it, you're the best.
Jewelry Care Guide
Jewelry Care Guide
To keep your GAIA gold-plated jewelry shining and prevent natural color change (oxidation), follow these simple rules:
- Last On, First Off: Put your jewelry on after makeup, perfume, and lotion have dried. Take it off first when you get home.
- Keep It Dry: Always remove your pieces before showering, swimming, or intense workouts.
- Avoid Chemicals: Direct contact with harsh chemicals, perfumes, or saltwater can strip the gold layer and cause dullness.
- Store Safely: Keep your pieces in the GAIA airtight pouch or a jewelry box to protect them from moisture.
Dark Matter, Gold Light
A gold-plated box chain carries a sequence of matte Black Onyx spheres — deep, lightless, their surface absorbing rather than reflecting — separated by gold-plated barrel spacers that hold each stone at a precise interval. At each end of the bead cluster, a gold-plated star charm hangs freely: one textured and dense, one smooth and outlined. The same symbol, two different surfaces. The chain continues past both, thin and uninterrupted, as if the stars and stones are a moment within a longer thought.
- Elements: Natural Black Onyx beads, gold-plated stainless steel box chain, gold-plated barrel spacers, two gold-plated star charms
- Size: Adjustable
- Rarity: One piece
- Associations: Capricorn, Leo (Black Onyx)
Express your natural beauty with GAIA pieces, handcrafted with care in Egypt.
Roman women of senatorial rank wore black onyx cameos carved with the portraits of goddesses — Minerva, Diana, Juno — as personal seals and declarations of allegiance. The stone's resistance to scratching made it a material of permanence in a world where most things were temporary. To wear onyx was to align oneself with what does not yield (Higgins, R., Greek and Roman Jewellery, Methuen, 1961).


