Labradorite reads gray until you tilt it. Then the flash comes out. Blue, gold, green, sometimes purple, depending on the light and the angle. That flash is called labradorescence, and it comes from light bouncing between microscopic layers inside the stone.
The tower shape stands upright on a desk or altar and shows off the flash across a taller surface than the tumble does. It's the version to display in a spot you walk past often, because the color shifts every time you catch it from a different angle.
Labradorite has a long reputation as a boundary stone. Empaths, therapists, teachers, and anyone who spends a workday absorbing other people's energy reach for it. The tower on the desk is a physical marker that reminds the nervous system to hold its own edge instead of blur.
You'll be sent the one intuitively chosen for you.
Quick facts
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Material: Labradorite (a plagioclase feldspar)
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Sizes: Approx 2.5 to 3.5 inches tall, small standing tower
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Best for: Boundary work for empaths, desk anchor, visual reminder through a busy day
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Pairs well with: Black tourmaline, moonstone, selenite