Description
Named after Njord, the Norse god of the sea, wind, and seafaring, this piece felt like an obvious match for fluorite the moment I saw this stone. Njord is tied to the coast, to the space where sky and ocean meet, and this fluorite sits in that same in-between place with its soft green shifting into pale, misty veils that look exactly like light moving through shallow water.
Stone: Fluorite
Wire: Oxidised copper
About Fluorite
- Fluorite is one of the most colour-varied minerals in the world, and no two stones look the same, which makes it a genuinely interesting stone to work with.
- The name comes from the Latin fluere, meaning to flow, which suits both the stone’s banded internal movement and Njord’s domain over tides and currents.
- It is believed to settle scattered or overactive thinking, making it one of the more mentally grounding stones despite how light and airy it looks.








