Andrea Li
Green Amethyst
Jewelry
Andrea Li Handcrafted Green Amethyst Jewelry
Andrea Li designs one-of-a-kind green amethyst jewelry by hand in her Denver studio, working in 14k gold, gold-filled, and sterling silver. Every piece is built once. When it sells, it's gone. If you've always been drawn to the stone nobody else notices, the quiet green instead of the obvious purple, you already know why you're here.
Who Does Green Amethyst Flatter?
Green amethyst's soft sage tones are surprisingly universal — but the way it reads changes beautifully depending on who's wearing it.
Fair & Light
Prasiolite's gentle green adds warmth without overpowering. The stone's transparency catches light in a way that feels fresh and delicate against porcelain skin.
Medium & Olive
This is green amethyst's sweet spot. The sage-green harmonizes with olive undertones instead of competing — it looks like it was always meant to be there.
Warm & Golden
Set in 14k gold, green amethyst against warm skin creates a rich earth-tone palette. The stone's depth intensifies, reading more olive than sage.
Deep & Rich
Green amethyst glows against deep skin — the stone's internal light becomes more visible, more alive. The contrast is quiet but unmistakable.
When to Give Green Amethyst
Green amethyst shares February's birthstone connection with its purple cousin — but the best reason to give it is that the person you're buying for has never been obvious about anything.
February Birthday (The Unexpected One)
Everyone expects purple amethyst for February. Green amethyst says "I know you well enough to know you'd want the one nobody else thinks of." That's a more meaningful gift than the expected choice.
Anniversary
Prasiolite at Mohs 7 is durable enough for daily wear. A one-of-a-kind green amethyst piece marks a year in a way that mass-produced jewelry never could — because there's literally only one.
The Nature Lover
Green amethyst's color comes from the earth itself — iron-bearing amethyst transformed by volcanic heat. For someone who draws energy from the natural world, this stone carries that story.
Just Because
The most memorable gifts have no occasion. A handcrafted prasiolite piece from a one-woman Denver studio carries a story the recipient gets to tell — who made it, where it came from, and why there's only one.
New Beginning
Graduation, new job, a fresh start. Green amethyst has been associated with clarity and transformation for centuries — a stone for someone stepping into a new chapter.
Green Amethyst vs. Similar Stones
Three green stones, three completely different personalities. Here's how to know which one is yours.
| Property | Green Amethyst | Peridot | Emerald |
|---|---|---|---|
| Color | Cool sage-green | Warm yellow-green | Deep vivid green |
| Mineral Family | Quartz | Olivine | Beryl |
| Hardness | 7 Mohs | 6.5–7 Mohs | 7.5–8 Mohs |
| Daily Wear? | Excellent | Good (avoid hard impact) | Good (often included) |
| Clarity | Exceptional transparency | Usually eye-clean | Almost always included |
| Price Range | Moderate | Moderate | High–very high |
| Best For | The person who wants understated sophistication | The person drawn to warm, sunny energy | The person making a statement with color |
| Personality | Quiet depth | Warm optimism | Bold luxury |
Green amethyst's exceptional clarity and transparency is its superpower — the light passes through in a way that emerald's natural inclusions simply don't allow.
How to Wear Green Amethyst
Prasiolite is the stone that plays well with others — but knows how to hold a room on its own.
Solo Sculptural Piece
One green amethyst necklace, nothing else at the neckline. The stone's transparency does the work — it catches light differently every time you move. Let it breathe.
Best with: Clean necklines, natural fabricsEarth Tone Palette
Green amethyst is a natural match for olive, cream, taupe, and warm browns. The stone disappears into the palette in the best way — it feels organic, not accessorized.
Best with: Linen, silk, muted layersMixed Green Stones
Layer prasiolite with labradorite, tourmaline, or peridot for a tonal green story. Each stone reads differently but the palette holds together. Andrea Li's cluster designs already do this — the gemstones are chosen to create depth through variation.
Best with: Tonal dressing, monochromeGold Contrast
14k gold and green amethyst is a timeless pairing — the warm metal pulls out the stone's earthy undertones. This is the combination that makes people ask "where did you get that?"
Best with: Evening wear, warm lightingWhy I Work with Prasiolite
Prasiolite sits in a color space that almost no other gemstone occupies — cooler than peridot, warmer than green tourmaline, softer than emerald. It pairs beautifully with both gold and silver, and it has enough transparency to let light pass through in a way that feels alive on the skin. Every piece I create with it is one-of-a-kind because no two prasiolite stones carry the same depth of green.
Amethyst's Green Secret
Most people know amethyst as purple. What they don't know is that when certain iron-bearing amethyst meets intense heat — either from volcanic activity or careful treatment — the crystal transforms from violet to this ethereal green. It's the same mineral, the same structure, but with a completely different personality. That transformation is part of what makes it special.
Caring for Your Green Amethyst
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes — prasiolite is the gemological name for green amethyst. Both are quartz colored by iron impurities, but where standard amethyst gets its purple from irradiation, prasiolite's green emerges when specific iron-bearing amethyst meets intense heat. While "green amethyst" is the more familiar term, gemologists prefer "prasiolite" because by strict definition, amethyst is purple. I use both names because most people searching for this stone know it as green amethyst.
Extremely. Natural prasiolite was first discovered in the early 1800s in Silesia, Poland, and only a handful of natural deposits exist worldwide — including Bahia, Brazil; Thunder Bay, Canada; and Namibia. Most prasiolite on the market is produced by carefully heating amethyst from Brazil's Minas Gerais region to approximately 500°C, which converts the purple to green. This heat treatment is stable, permanent, and an accepted practice in the gemstone industry.
With normal wear, no. The green color is stable and won't fade from everyday use. However, prolonged exposure to intense direct sunlight — like leaving your piece on a sunny windowsill for weeks — can gradually lighten the color. Store your green amethyst jewelry in a pouch or jewelry box when you're not wearing it, and you'll preserve the color indefinitely. This is similar to how you'd care for any fine gemstone.
Absolutely. Prasiolite ranks 7 on the Mohs hardness scale — harder than glass, steel, and most everyday materials that could scratch it. It's an excellent choice for rings, necklaces, earrings, and bracelets you plan to wear regularly. Just follow the basic care guidelines: apply perfume and lotion before putting on your jewelry, clean with warm soapy water rather than ultrasonic cleaners, and store it separately to prevent scratching from harder gemstones like diamonds or sapphires.
They're all green, but the resemblance ends there. Emerald is a beryl mineral — much softer (7.5–8 Mohs, but often with inclusions that make it fragile) and dramatically more expensive. Peridot is an olivine mineral with a warmer, more yellow-green tone. Prasiolite sits in a cooler, more sophisticated sage-green space with exceptional clarity and transparency. It's also significantly more affordable than emerald, making it perfect for statement pieces where you want size and presence without the five-figure price tag.
Green amethyst is remarkably versatile with metals. In my studio, I most often set prasiolite in 14k gold — the warm yellow gold creates a beautiful contrast that brings out the green's earthy depth. Rose gold adds a romantic warmth. Sterling silver or white gold lean the stone cooler and more contemporary. There's no wrong answer; it depends on your personal style and skin tone. That said, gold is my go-to because it makes the green absolutely glow.
Since prasiolite is a variety of amethyst, it shares the February birthstone connection. If you love the idea of a February birthstone but want something beyond the traditional purple, green amethyst is a perfect alternative. It carries the same quartz family heritage and metaphysical associations with clarity and calm, but with a distinctly different personality.
Looking for something you don't see here? Every piece is one-of-a-kind — when it's gone, it's gone.
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