Sapphire

Sapphire is corundum — one of the hardest minerals on earth, second only to diamond. Trace elements shift its color across the entire spectrum: iron and titanium produce the classic blue, chromium brings pink and red, vanadium creates violet, and iron alone yields yellow and green. Every color belongs to the same mineral. The finest blue sapphires come from Kashmir; Sri Lanka, Myanmar, and Madagascar yield exceptional stones across the full color range. Australia produces dark inky blue; Montana yields pale, steely tones.
Whatever its color, sapphire shares one quality: clarity of character. It is a stone associated with precision and truth — not as abstraction but as practice. It wears across decades without fading and needs no context to justify being worn. For people who say what they mean and mean what they say. Best worn when directness matters — which, for some people, is always.
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