The Necklace That Flew Across an Ocean
It began in a small workshop in the American Southwest, where the sun hits the red rocks differently — sharper, older, more honest.
A Navajo silversmith was shaping a piece of natural turquoise — sky-blue with the dark web-like matrix that tells you it’s real. He worked it into a cabochon, then set it into a copper Tree of Life pendant. Each branch was hammered by hand, imperfect in the way only human hands can be imperfect.
The necklace was meant for a local gallery. It never made it there.
Instead, it found its way — through a series of chance encounters that felt less like chance and more like destiny — to a Taoist temple in the mountains of Sichuan, China. The temple master recognized the stone immediately. Turquoise: the stone that bridges worlds. The blue of the sky, the green of the earth, held together by the dark lines of human fate.
He performed the blessing ritual. Incense. Intention. Whispered words in a language older than both countries.
The necklace then traveled once more — to the Xuanyi Crystal studio, where it was matched with a strand of hand-selected turquoise beads to create a set: necklace and bracelet, designed to be worn together or separately, depending on the day and the woman wearing them.
The Stone That Speaks Truth
Turquoise is not a quiet stone. It has been revered by at least twelve distinct civilizations — Navajo, Tibetan, Ancient Egyptian, Persian, Mesoamerican — all of whom independently decided that this blue-green stone was sacred.
In Navajo tradition, turquoise is the stone of the sky itself — a piece of fallen heaven that protects the wearer from harm and brings good fortune. In Tibetan culture, it is the “stone of success” — carried by traders, worn by monks, set into elaborate jewelry that marks major life transitions. In Ancient Egypt, it adorned the breastplate of the pharaohs and the funeral mask of Tutankhamun — a stone deemed worthy of the afterlife.
But turquoise’s power isn’t just historical. It’s physical, emotional, energetic.
It is intimately connected to the throat chakra — the energy center that governs communication, self-expression, and speaking your truth. In crystal healing traditions, wearing turquoise near the throat is said to help you find the words you didn’t know you had. To say the thing that needs saying. To be heard.
It is also a stone of protection — not the aggressive kind, but the steady, background kind. Like a friend who walks slightly behind you on a dark street. Present. Watching. Silent.
And it is the December birthstone — making this set one of the most meaningful gifts you can give (or receive) in the winter months, when the world is cold and the sky is the color of the stone itself.
The Tree of Life: What Grows Beneath Your Heart
The Tree of Life is perhaps the only symbol that appears in every major cultural and spiritual tradition on earth.
Celtic. Norse. Christian. Islamic. Buddhist. Hindu. Chinese. West African. Native American.
In every language, it tells the same story: that all life is connected. That the roots that ground you are the same energy that feeds your branches. That you can be still and growing, both at once.
The copper Tree of Life pendant at the center of this necklace is hand-hammered — each branch unique, each root intentional. Copper is itself a conductive metal, believed in many traditions to amplify the energy of the stones it touches.
When you wear this pendant at the hollow of your throat, you are wearing a reminder: My roots are deep. My reach is mine to decide. I am connected to everything, and I am still myself.
The Ethnic Boho Aesthetic: When Free Spirits Find Their Aesthetic
There is a particular kind of woman who is drawn to ethnic boho jewelry.
She is not interested in mass-produced perfection. She wants the imperfection that proves something was made by human hands. She wants her jewelry to look like it has a story — because she has one.
The ethnic boho aesthetic is about layering meaning as well as metal. It’s about mixing textures — the smooth polish of turquoise, the warm patina of copper, the organic irregularity of hand-cut beads. It’s about colors that exist in nature — sky blue, desert brown, leaf green, stone grey.
This set was designed for the woman who builds her own aesthetic out of whatever speaks to her. Who wears a vintage dress with boots. Who stacks her turquoise necklace with a thin gold chain and calls it “curated chaos.” Who doesn’t ask for permission to take up space.
The Set: More Than the Sum of Its Parts
This is a 2-piece set for a reason.
The necklace (adjustable chain, 16–18 inches) sits at the collarbone — the perfect length to be seen, never strangled. The matching bracelet (elastic, one-size-fits-most) carries the same turquoise beads, creating a subtle coordination that elevates your entire look without trying.
Wear them together for an intentional, put-together look. Wear just the necklace with a v-neck tee and jeans — instant elevation. Wear just the bracelet with a blazer for a meeting where you need to feel grounded. Stack the bracelet with other crystal bracelets for a maximalist, boho look that photographs beautifully.
The point is: this set adapts to you. Not the other way around.
Why Turquoise Now
We are living through a moment of collective anxiety. The news is heavy. The future is uncertain. People are looking — consciously or not — for stones that offer protection and grounding.
Turquoise is having a quiet comeback. Not as a trend, but as a need.
Google search volume for “turquoise necklace” has risen 34% year-over-year (2024–2025). “December birthstone gift” spikes every November and December. “Protection stone jewelry” has doubled in search volume since 2022.
But beyond the data — there is a feeling you get when you hold a piece of natural turquoise. It’s cool to the touch. The color is impossible to replicate artificially (though many try). The matrix patterns are like fingerprints — no two stones exactly alike.
When you buy this set, you are buying something that existed before you were born and will outlast the season.
Taoist Blessing: The Intention Beneath the Aesthetic
Every set passes through a Taoist blessing ceremony before shipping.
This is not a religious requirement. It is a tradition. Incense is burned. The master speaks intentions of protection, clarity, and prosperity over the stones. The stones sit on the altar for a full day, absorbing the accumulated intention of the space.
You don’t have to believe in crystal energy to appreciate the care that goes into this process. You just have to appreciate that someone, somewhere, wished for your wellbeing before this necklace ever reached your hands.
For the Woman Who Refuses to Be Generic
This set was made for a specific kind of woman.
She is 22 or 62. She is an artist, a teacher, a mother, a wanderer. She has a degree in something she no longer practices. She has a job that pays the bills and a soul that wants more.
She doesn’t buy jewelry to impress people. She buys it to recognize herself.
The turquoise speaks to her need for truth and communication. The Tree of Life speaks to her need for roots and growth. The ethnic boho aesthetic speaks to her need to be different — deliberately, joyfully different.
If this description feels like looking in a mirror — this set is yours. If it doesn’t — there is still a woman in your life who needs it. A daughter. A sister. A friend who is going through something she won’t talk about yet.
Product Details
| Stone | Natural Turquoise (unique matrix per piece) |
|---|---|
| Color | Sky Blue · Blue-Green · Robin’s Egg Blue (natural variations) |
| Pendant | Copper Tree of Life (hand-hammered, each unique) |
| Necklace Length | Approx. 40–46cm adjustable |
| Bracelet | Approx. 18cm elastic, one-size-fits-most |
| Set Includes | Necklace 1 + Matching Bracelet 1 |
| Metal | Copper / 925 Silver (option available) |
| Clasp | Lobster clasp, gold-plated |
| Weight | Necklace: ~12–15g Bracelet: ~8–10g |
| Blessing | Taoist energy blessing ceremony |
| Packaging | Signature gift box + meaning card |
How to Wear Your Set
Solo Statement — Necklace alone, with an open-collar shirt or v-neck. Let the Tree of Life pendant sit at the hollow of your throat. Simple. Powerful.
The Full Set — Necklace + bracelet together. Works especially well with earth-tone outfits (browns, creams, olives, rust). The turquoise becomes the pop of color that pulls everything together.
The Layer — Stack the turquoise necklace with a shorter gold chain and a longer leather cord for a boho-luxe look that works with both casual and dressed-up outfits.
The Intention Ritual — Before putting it on, hold the pendant in your hand for ten seconds. Set an intention for the day. It sounds small. The effects are cumulative.
Gifting — Arrives in our signature gift box with a card explaining the meaning of turquoise and the Tree of Life. Ready to give. No wrapping required.
Care & Longevity
Turquoise is a relatively soft stone (5–6 on the Mohs scale). It likes to be worn, but it doesn’t like to be abused.
- Avoid chemicals — No perfume directly on the stone, no hairspray, no swimming pool chlorine
- Wipe gently — Soft dry cloth only; don’t soak in water
- Store separately — Turquoise can be scratched by harder stones; keep it in its own pouch
- Recharge monthly — Place in moonlight (or sunlight for no more than 2 hours) to refresh the stone’s energy
With proper care, this set will outlast the season, the year, maybe even you. Turquoise artifacts have been found in burial sites that are 3,000 years old. The stone endures.
The necklace that was meant for a gallery in the American Southwest is now here. It traveled across an ocean. It was blessed in a mountain temple. It is waiting for the woman who knows that jewelry is not just decoration — it’s a declaration.
You know who you are. This set knows who it’s for.









10 reviews for Tree of Life Turquoise Necklace Set · Ethnic Boho Style · Taoist Blessed Crystal Jewelry for Women