Labradorite Crystal Guide: meaning, origin & properties
For the in-between.
Learn what Labradorite is, where ours comes from, traditional associations across cultures, and how to identify a real specimen, in our complete Labradorite Crystal Guide.
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Sourced through a regional cooperative or community-based workshop. Processing and economic benefit stay local, which means more of the value reaches the people doing the work.
Read our Sourcing Standards →Labradorite looks like a plain grey stone until you turn it. Then the flash hits, blue, green, gold, sometimes a whole sheet of color that lights up and disappears again. The effect has its own name: labradorescence.
Labradorite was first described in Labrador, Canada in 1770, where Moravian missionaries found the flashing stones along the coast.
We bring these tumbled stones in from Atsimo-Andrefana, Madagascar.
Labradorite has long been used in practices around listening to the quieter signals, a sense of groundedness when things feel uncertain, and clarifying what you actually want. It's traditionally linked to the third eye and crown chakras. If that resonates, place one on a nightstand or on an altar where you sit. There's no single right way to carry it.
These are traditional associations drawn from historical practice. This stone is not a substitute for medical or mental health care.
A starting place for your own quiet practice.