Blue Sapphire
Sapphire is corundum — one of the hardest minerals on earth, second only to diamond. Trace iron and titanium shift the color from pale sky to deep cornflower blue, with every shade between. The finest sapphires come from the Kashmiri highlands, where crystals formed slowly in metamorphic rock at altitude over millions of years. Sri Lanka, Myanmar, and Thailand are also major sources. Australian sapphire tends toward dark, inky blue; Madagascar produces some of the most intensely saturated stones found today.
Blue sapphire is associated with clarity, precision, and truth — not as abstraction but as practice. It is a stone for people who say what they mean and mean what they say. Unsentimental in the best sense. It wears across decades without fading and needs no context to justify being on the hand or at the neck. Best worn when directness matters — which, for some people, is always.
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