| Aromatic
Crystals
Excerpted
from the book: "Secrets of Aromatic
Jewelry"
by Annette Green and Linda Dyett
Despite
scientists' insistence on their inefficacy,
gemstones and quartz crystals returned to favor in
the 1980s as a means to treat illness and improve
mood. The allure gems hold for aficionados has
largely to do with their origin. "All gems,
with the exception of coral and pearls," notes
the Tantric scholar Harish Johan, "are the
purest and finest consolidation of minerals that
were formed due to extreme heat and pressure inside
... the molten Earth." Therefore, he concludes,
gemstones are 'energy in crystalline form.'
Typically, crystals that are transparent or nearly
so are laid on the chakras, Sanskrit for energy
centers located on or aligned with the spine. The
effect is said to be healing, helping to improve any
faltering vibrational patterns in the body.
Devotees
have allied quartz crystals with fragrance in a
unique new species of aromatic jewelry that they
regard as synergistic. The concept is simple: a
minuscule fragrance well is drilled into a crystal,
and a few drops of fragrance are inserted with a
pipette. The preferred fragrances tend to be
alcohol-free perfumes or essential oil— such as
rosemary to purify, lavender to calm.
Sometimes particular gemstones are matched with
particular scents-lavender and amethyst, both violet
in color, are said to have a strong calming effect.
Since the drilled well is not stoppered, the scent
is free to diffuse. Even after slow evaporation, the
scent, as is always the case with aromatic jewelry,
lingers on the walls of the container. And when the
crystal is worn as jewelry, which is its intended
use, the fragrancing process is speeded up by the
wearer's body warmth. Moreover, the transparency or
translucency of the crystal allows the fragrance
itself to contribute its color to the jewel.
The
first crystals designed with fragrance wells were
developed in the late 1980's in a northern
California cottage-industry venture by a Brazilian
artist, Kendra Grace, and her American geologist
husband, Brian Cook, who devised a method for
drilling the wells without marring the stone. With
holes also drilled for stringing on a cord, these
crystals, known as Aromajewels, avoid metal mounts.
Indeed, except for the faceting, they are about as
basic and undecorated as jewelry can be. They
present as pure, unadulterated charms—amethyst,
rock crystal, citrine, tourmaline,
aquamarine—which fulfill the age-old intention of
protecting the wearer by suffusing her surroundings
with scent. Perhaps more then any other species of
contemporary aromatic jewelry, these crystals can
lay claim to being called amulets. Limited
quantities of Aromajewels, now made into earrings as
well as pendants, are sold at jewelry and
alternative health fairs around the country as well
as by mail order.
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