The Abundance Collection

Stones Traditionally Associated with Prosperity & Success

Gold-colored and green stones have been associated with wealth across cultures for obvious symbolic reasons - they resemble the things they're meant to attract. But the traditions run deeper than simple color association. Jade has been more valuable than gold in Chinese culture for millennia. Pyrite's metallic luster earned it the name 'fool's gold' precisely because people confused it with the real thing. These stones represent humanity's long relationship with material aspiration.

Prosperity associations are cultural traditions. No mineral attracts money. These stones can serve as reminders of financial goals during intentional practice.

Citrine

The Merchant's Stone

Hardness 7

Called 'the merchant's stone.' Shopkeepers historically placed citrine in cash registers. Associated with abundance and manifestation.

Pyrite

The Fool's Gold

Hardness 6.5

'Fool's gold' - its resemblance to gold is so convincing it fooled prospectors. Associated with attracting wealth and recognizing opportunity.

Jade

The Dream Stone

Hardness 6.5

More valuable than gold in imperial Chinese culture. Associated with prosperity, longevity, and nobility for over 5,000 years.

Aventurine

The Stone of Opportunity

Hardness 7

Called 'the stone of opportunity.' Green aventurine is one of the most popular prosperity stones in the crystal market.

Gold

The Eternal Metal

Hardness 2.5

The eternal metal. Every civilization in human history has associated gold with wealth, power, and divine favor.

Tiger's Eye

The Stone of Courage

Hardness 7

Associated with practical decision-making and financial wisdom. The chatoyant eye is said to see through deception in business.

Malachite

The Stone of Transformation

Hardness 3.5

Used as a merchant's talisman in the Middle Ages. Its banded green patterns were associated with growing wealth.

Sunstone

The Stone of Light

Hardness 6.5

Contains actual copper. The warm metallic shimmer is associated with solar energy, leadership, and attracting success.

Emerald

The Stone of Successful Love

Hardness 7.5

The gem of royalty and wealth. Cleopatra, Mughal emperors, and European monarchs all hoarded emeralds as symbols of power.

Moss Agate

The Gardener's Stone

Hardness 7

European farmers placed moss agate in fields for abundant harvests. The oldest agricultural prosperity stone tradition in Western culture.