Larimar Love

This blog is dedicated to the love of Larimar - a tranquil semi-precious pectolite found only in the Dominican Republic. We sell Larimar jewelry for fun and profit. Larimar is generally not very well known in the USA but better known in Europe. Afterall, 85% of tourism to the Dominican Republic is European. The Dominican Republic is so close to the US but relatively few Americans enjoy the all-inclusive deals available in the DR. BUY LARIMAR NOW http://mylarimar.com

Saturday, May 21, 2005

More praise for Larimar

"I just received my ( Larimar ) Aspirations necklace, and I want to tell you how beautiful it is. I am a jewelry designer, and very seldom do I buy jewelry. When I saw this wonderful stone I just had to have it. What a fantastic surprize when it came, and it was even more beautiful then the picture. I am very impressed, and will be back to shop (for myself) again."

This unsolicited comment was from Denise a new customer at http://mylarimar.com

Two more pendants like Denise's are available, click here:

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

new supplier

I have a new supplier! I got samples recently and the stone quality is fantastic! Look for new stuff on the websites.....

www.mylarimar.com
www.larimarlove.com

Surprise shipment from Jorge

I just got a surprise shipment from Jorge! Earring and Pendant sets, Little Balls of larimar and 3 Larimar Flowers. Great. Have to photograph and get up on the website!

Monday, May 16, 2005

Accolades from MyLarimar.com Customers

I wanted to share what some of our customers have said about MyLarimar.com

Michael Charlotte, North Carolina
Just to let you know that the order has arrived, and my wife is very happy with her earrings. Thanks very much.

I would first like to express my gratitude for all your efforts! It's not often as a consumer you have the opportunity to to deal with a company that will go that extra mile to make a special day or situation happen. You guys defiantly came through for me!

Sunday, my wife and I will be celebrating our first wedding anniversary! We actually traveled to the Dominican Republic for our honeymoon. During our vacation we were introduced to the Larimar gem. My wife immediately fell in love with the stone. I purchased her a beautiful ring during our visit. Since our trip there she has tried to find somewhere here locally in Charlotte to purchase additional Larimar jewelry, unfortunately she has had no luck. I placed my order with you guys late yesterday with hope of it arriving overnight. With it being late Friday my options were limited. After my order was confirmed, best scenario was an A.M. Monday delivery. With our anniversary being Sunday, boy would I have been in the dog house!

Friday night we had a family dinner to celebrate my sons birthday. It was around 7:30, I received a call on my cell phone from a number I didn't recognize. When answering I was surprised to hear from you guys. We discussed my situation and you promised me you would come through for me. And that you did!

You guys went above and beyond! You had someone drive to the airport that late on a Friday night to have my purchase shipped for A.M. delivery. I received my purchase before 9:30 A.M. Thanks to you guys our first anniversary will be wonderful! I look very much forward in shopping with you guys in the future and thanks for everything!

Peggy Bakersfield, California
Hello, I want to tell you how great your service has been! I was a little nervous about doing an order via the computer but I am so pleased at how everything was handled! Now I am ready to order more.

Glyn H. Cincinnati, Ohio
I would just like to tell you that my Larimar angel pendant is beautiful. I put it on as soon as I got it and have worn it ever since. I'm getting lots of compliments on it and questions. Most people have never seen the stone before and I hadn't until I was on a Carnival Cruise ship in October. I'm very satisfied with your jewelry and will recommend it to others.

Helene B. Montreal, Quebec
I received my package and everything is wonderful. It will be a great gift for Christmas. Best wishes and Merry Christmas to all the members of MyLarimar Team.

Donna C.
I was really excited to find these earrings on your website. My sister-in-law just came back from the carribean where she discovered larimar. She bought a necklace and bracelet when she was there, and was trying to find something that would compliment these two pieces. I purchased them for her on a Sunday. They were shipped out Monday, and was due to arrive on Tuesday. Unfortunately, due to an error on Fedex's behalf, (not at all the fault of mylarimar.com) my package was left at a house other than mine. I notified mylarimar.com, and immediately they shipped out another package.
Their customer service truly is #1, Thank-You!

Linda G.
I love my tear drop earrings! I received many compliments on them. I can wear them with anything and they look great!

Debbie C.
Exquisite bracelet, beautiful stones, carefully handcrafted, and best price on the web!

Margaret T.
Beautiful Bracelet!! Gorgeous Stones!! Outstanding Workmanship!! Customer Service is the best!! 5 STARS ALL AROUND!!

Frances L.
Thanks so much I just got my ring today and I love it. Just what I was looking for. The ring came in the mail faster than I could put my credit card away. Wish all venders were this easy to work with. Super customer service. Would buy from again and again :-) THANK YOU !!!!

Yamaguchi R., first Japanese customer
I have received my Larimar just now? It takes two weeks so they may feel it was long trips! They are very cute and I like them, especially little ball of Larimar Pendant. It is beautiful blue. (They are uncostumed.) Thank you very much.
I found this interesting article with a lot more detail about Larimar.

LARIMAR
Beautiful, Blue - and Baffling

By Robert E. Woodruff, Ph.D.

Article in Lapidary Journal, January 1986
Artículo en la revista Lapidary Journal, Enero 1986. Por el momento, solamente en Inglés

Travel to exotic places is one of the advantages of being an entomologist. In search of parasites for biological control of a weevil pest introduced from the West Indies to Florida, I first went to the Dominican Republic in 1972. The trip would mark the beginning of a long-term study of the fossil insects in Dominican Republic amber.

As a hobbyist lapidary, I keep an eye out for interesting materials found in the locales I visit professionally. On one subsequent trip to the Dominican Republic in 1975, I was presented with an unidentified, beautiful blue stone by Professor Eugenio Marcano, the premier naturalist in that country and a well-versed geologist and paleontologist. The specimen was a great surprise to me, primarily because little lapidary material is found anywhere in the West Indies.

In my many trips to 15 of the islands, I have found no agate, only a few jaspers, some petrified wood and of course the amber. There are some beautiful archaeological pieces of jade, the source of which I believe is yet to be discovered in the Dominican Republic. I find it difficult to believe that it is all trade goods from Central America, as is often suggested.

The material that I was given was obviously stream tumbled. It had been obtained from the Bahoruco River, Barahona Province, in the southwestern part of the country. A small number of jewelry pieces using the material could be seen in the market in Santo Domingo at that time. I was fortunate to be in Washington, D.C. sometime later and took my specimens to the Smithsonian Institution for identification.

Pete Dunn, of the mineralogy department, kindly examined them and stated that he had seen specimens of the material earlier and identified it as pectolite. This information was passed on by me and others to those involved with the mineral in the Dominican Republic. Several shops there now display brochures describing the material as blue pectolite based on that information.

Within a short time the material had become the subject of many rumors and considerable commercial interest. Later it was the subject of inquiries to the Mail Bag column of Lapidary Journal.

Its discovery has not been documented, but it is rumored to have been found by a Peace Corps volunteer named Norman Rilling in 1974. The history of the stone takes many turns. It was orginally named Travelina by Miguel Mendez of Santo Domingo. This name, however, soon gave way to the current Larimar, coined by combining the first of Mendez's daughter's name, Larissa, with "mar," the Spanish for sea, whose color the stone resembles. Anyone who has seen the exquistie blue-green Caribbean waters off the Dominican Republic will concur that this is an appropriate and descriptive name.

Because all mineral rights in the Dominican Republic belong to the government, it was necessary to obtain a "concession" from the Ministry of mines in order to pursue any commercial venture. A corporation was formed for this purpose by Mendez and the owner of the property, a lawyer named Luis Augusto Gonzalez Vega. The corporation, however, was able to mine for only a short time, and neither of these gentlement is currently involved in mining.

Amid Tropical Splendor

The mine is located about 10 kilometers north of the main road from Barahona to Bahoruco; the road lies three kilometers east of the latter. Known as the Camino Arroyo a Filipinas, or the road to Filipinas, the dirt and gravel road follows several steep hills and is normally not passable without four-wheel drive. In addition, it is only poorly marked.

Nevertheless, the scenery, once found, is spectacular! The road gradually climbs from sea level through tropical forests covered with orchids and bromeliads, more commonly known as air plants. Coffee, bananas, citurs, mangoes and breadfruit proliferate. Few houses are to be seen along the way, and these are mainly temporary thatched huts with banana-leaf roofs.

Replacement Mineral

In the piles of debris, I've found small pieces of olivine and quantities of carbonized wood among the basaltic rock. The deposit is clearly volcanic, and gas pockets are filled with various minerals, Larimar is the most abundant filler. It is found in several shades of blue and green - from translucent, similar to gem-grade chrysocolla, to dark variscite-like green. Narrow bands are scattered through the basalt matrix but are of little lapidary value.

Much of the best quality Larimar appears to fill pockets created by the volatization of trees, burned by volcanic activity. Naturally, this process was variable, and some trees were more rapidly and completely burned out than others. As a result, there are some pieces of carbon, some with partial Larimar replacement, and some with no suggestion of their organic origin. I believe that all cylindrical pieces are replacements of wood.

What is Larimar?

When I started this article, over two years ago, I fully expected to have concrete mineralogical data to include. Dr. Frederick H. Pough had become interested, and samples were submitted to zeolite (lava-related minerals) specialists for analysis. The results of these tests are not yet available. Larimar has been tentatively identified as pectolite, but there is doubt among several mineralogists about this determination.

Because the material is of volcanic origin, and it is often a replacement, great variability exists in the composition. Undoubtedly there is some pectolite, but chemical analysis indicates minimal amounts of sodium. Some needle growth, within the blue areas, has high aluminum content, suggesting natrolite. Much of the material is calcium silicate with occasional native copper flecks. Recent finds include "scenic" pieces with red plumes (iron) on a blue background and white "clouds". Other samples contain pieces resembling thomsonites, some talc and several micro-minerals.

Hardness varies, but most dark blue material is from 5 to 7 on the Mohs scale. The color sometimes produces reticulate patterns of blue and white and there is often a pronounced silky chatoyance. Pectolite is often splintery in a literal sense: The long needles can be hazardous to a collector's fingers. This is not true of Larimar, where the material is much more compact and therefore cuttable. X-ray diffraction is suggestive of pectolite, but with some unusual peaks.

Some chemical analysis has been performed with scanning X-ray probe analysis (through the kindness of Steve Speck). Analysis has shown a lack of sodium in dark blue Larimar and the presence of aluminum and sodium in natrolite-like crystals growing into the Larimar.

Though it has yet to be precisely identified, there is no doubt that Larimar, whatever it is mineralogically, is a captivating and valuable material to the lapidary.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I have had considerable help during many aspects of this study and wish to thank the following: Dr. Frank Blanchard, Jake Brodzinsky, Francisco Cuevas, Pete Dunn, Nelson Fulgencio, Luis Gonzalez, Dr. Francis Hueber, Eugenio Marcano, Heinz Meder, Miguel Mendez, Frank Moya-Pons, Ramon and Antonio Ortiz, Jose Ottenwalder, Vicente Peres, Dr. Frederick Pough, Steve Sloan, Steve Speck and Noel Valette. In addition, I wish to thank all the friendly people of the Dominican Republic who have assisted me during 12 trips there since 1973.

More info about Larimar

Larimar (Pectolite) Facts, Information and Description

Larimar is a rare form of pectolite, which was discovered in the 1970's and is only found in the Dominican Republic. It has an extraordinary blue appearance similar to the color of the ocean in tropical areas. Hardness varies between 5-7 on the Mohs scale with the darker blue stones ranging closer to 7.

The name "Larimar" comes from a combination of Larissa and Mar and was given to the stone by a Dominican who named the stone after his daughter Larissa and Mar, the Spanish word for sea.

This unique Caribbean gemstone sometimes may be mistaken for turquoise.

Folklore, Legend, Healing Properties:

Its powers are believed to helps us to view events from a different perspective; it softens, enlightens and heals in a physical, emotional, mental and spiritual way.

Larimar stimulates the heart, throat, third eye and crown chakras facilitating inner wisdom and outer manifestation. It represents peace and clarity radiating healing and love energy. It is recommended for people who are stressed.

Virgin Islands -Larimar

Virgin Islands E-Magazine

The Story of Larimar - The Caribbean Gem

Larimar or blue pectolite is an extremely rare gemstone. It has been found only in one location: a mountainous, relatively inaccessible area in the province of Barahona in the Dominican Republic. The first mention of the stone is in a request to mine Larimar in 1916, however it wasn't until 1974 that the stone really made an appearance.

In 1974, Norman Rilling, a member of the U.S. Peace Corps, and Miguel Méndez, a Dominican found pieces of Larimar on the seashore. The word Larimar was created by Mendez, who combined his daughter's name Larissa with the Spanish world for sea, Mar.

Before Mendez and Rilling, local inhabitants of the region and their ancestors had long been aware of the stone. Early theories suggested Larimar was produced by the Sea, later by the earth's volcanic movements. Island legends said that the stones could be collected easily on the beach, but one day there were no more blue Larimar stones left. Locals explored upstream and found a rock formation, which appeared to be the source of the blue stone. This legend holds truth; Mendez and Rilling in 1974 would follow a river upstream and find sources of the blue stone.

Most small blocks of Larimar are in situ, meaning they exist in the very place where they formed. However through soil erosion some pieces broke off and were moved by rainfall down the slopes of the hillsides to rivers. The river deposited them in the Caribbean Sea, some pieces washed up on the seashore by waves.

The stone is formed when hot gases push crystallized minerals up though volcanic 'tubes'. In order to mine and excavate the stone miners must identify these tubes and dig deeper and deeper into old volcanoes. Larimar is used most often to make jewelry but has also been used to make beads, decorative objects and even handles on cabinets.

Larimar is considered a healing stone, and said to be finely tuned to the human body particularly to the throat area. It is said that it increases speech and communication skills and supports the body's natural healing process. Persons believing in this have been known to wear Larimar jewelry or to put pieces of Larimar in their pockets or under their pillows. Larimar is also called the Atlantis Stone, because a Spiritual master who lived in Trinidad and Tobago and who founded many Yoga Centers across the world, claimed that some islands in the Caribbean including the Dominican Republic were part of the lost continent of Atlantis. He went further to say that on one of those islands a blue stone with healing powers would be found - a description that corresponds to Larimar. Today, there are thousands of people, naturalists and persons practicing alternative and holistic healing methods, who use Larimar to assist and reinforce healing processes.

Larimar's beautiful blue color is often considered to embody the beautiful blue colors of the sea and sky found in the Caribbean. Its origin and appearance have made it popularly known as the Caribbean Gem. Larimar jewelry is popularly created and sold in stores throughout the Caribbean, including the Virgin Islands. Shop on-line for Larimar at http://www.mylarimar.com or http://larimarlove.com.

Sunday, May 15, 2005

1 cent Larimar Auctions coming soon.

I have an idea to make Larimar better known. I am investing in some small stud earrings and will auction them off on ebay starting at 1 cent each! Whaddayathink?

Where Can I buy Larimar?

I have two spots on the internet where you may buy Larimar Jewelry at very, very reasonable prices.

http://www.mylarimar.com
- Free shipping from this website.

http://www.larimarlove.com
- this is my ebay store where you can pay with paypal.

Have fun!

the story of Larimar


  • Hardness: about 7
  • Specific gravity: 2.74 - 2.88
  • Spot refractive index reading: 1.60
What is larimar? Larimar is a rare and beautiful gemstone that has been found in only one location on earth. The stone varies in color from green to blue - it resembles the clear blue waters of the Caribbean Sea.

The region: The one place on earth where this stone is found is a remote part of the southwestern region of the Dominican Republic.

A brief history: In 1974 a Peace Corps volunteer, Norman Rilling accompanied by a Dominican, Miguel Méndez, found the blue stones on the coast of Barahona. They followed the Bahoruco river upstream until they reached an outcrop at Los Chupaderos.

The mining process: Larimar is created deep inside volcanic mountains. Excavation is done by native Dominicans with the assistance of simple, primitive tools.

Refining the rocks: This process consists of many stages, first the raw material must be sorted - not all the rocks from the mine are suitable for jewelry. Next they are cut into pieces and classified according to size, color and form. Continuing the transformation the stones are shaped then polished and finally mounted onto the jewelry by a goldsmith/silversmith.