Statement necklace No 1
The labradorite takes centre stage here: following an Inuit myth, the northern lights escaped from labradorite.
I use hexagons a lot as they are a truly fascinating shape in nature: from soap foam to basalt columns and insect eyes they are everywhere in our universe. A rather big one is at Saturn’s north pole.
The sides of the hexagon are about 14.500km long, which is about 2000km longer than the diameter of Earth.
The labradorite takes centre stage here: following an Inuit myth, the northern lights escaped from labradorite.
I use hexagons a lot as they are a truly fascinating shape in nature: from soap foam to basalt columns and insect eyes they are everywhere in our universe. A rather big one is at Saturn’s north pole.
The sides of the hexagon are about 14.500km long, which is about 2000km longer than the diameter of Earth.
The labradorite takes centre stage here: following an Inuit myth, the northern lights escaped from labradorite.
I use hexagons a lot as they are a truly fascinating shape in nature: from soap foam to basalt columns and insect eyes they are everywhere in our universe. A rather big one is at Saturn’s north pole.
The sides of the hexagon are about 14.500km long, which is about 2000km longer than the diameter of Earth.