Verde Ring
Verde Ring
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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.
Raw and uneven. That's the point.
A beaded ring built on matte Black Onyx, with raw Malachite chips clustered at the front. The green is deep and uneven — banded, textured, each chip a different shape. A single silver spacer sits at the base. Size 7, hand-finished for daily wear.
- Elements: Natural Black Onyx beads, natural Malachite chips, silver metal spacer, elastic core
- Size: 7
- Rarity: Limited seasonal release.
- Associations: Scorpio (Malachite) | Capricorn (Onyx) | Leo (Onyx)
Express your natural beauty with GAIA pieces, handcrafted with care in Egypt.
Malachite was among the first stones worked by ancient Egyptians — not as ornament, but as pigment. Ground into powder, it produced the green used in eye cosmetics and wall paintings across dynastic periods. By the New Kingdom, it had moved from workshop to tomb: carved Malachite amulets appear in burial assemblages alongside gold and lapis lazuli, placed as objects of protection. The stone was also mined extensively in the Sinai, where Egyptian expeditions left inscriptions recording the scale of extraction. Its green was not decorative first — it was industrial, then sacred. — Aldred, C., Jewels of the Pharaohs, Thames & Hudson, 1971


