Free U.S. Shipping
Dispatched from the USA with care
Hustle-Free Returns & Exchanges
Simple, worry-free process
Ethically Crafted
Responsibly sourced, consciously made
Loved by 200,000+ Couples
Fantasy-inspired, handcrafted jewelry
What Is Morganite?
Morganite is a pink-to-peach variety of the mineral beryl — the same mineral that produces emerald (green beryl), aquamarine (blue beryl), and heliodor (yellow beryl). The pink color comes from trace amounts of manganese within the crystal structure, and the specific shade ranges from delicate pastel pink through warm peach to coral-pink. Most morganite on the market displays soft, gentle pink tones; deeper saturated pinks are rarer and command higher pricing.
The stone was first formally identified in 1911 in Madagascar and named after John Pierpont Morgan (J.P. Morgan), the American financier and notable gem collector who was honored when the new beryl variety was scientifically described. Natural morganite has since been mined in significant deposits across Brazil (the largest commercial source), Madagascar, Afghanistan, Mozambique, Nigeria, the United States (particularly California and Maine), and Russia. Lab-created morganite has been commercially available since the mid-20th century and is produced today by several major gemstone-growing facilities worldwide.
Mohs hardness: 7.5–8. Morganite shares beryl's solid mid-range hardness — significantly harder than moss agate (6.5–7), opal (5.5–6.5), or moonstone (6–6.5), but slightly softer than sapphire (9), moissanite (9.25), and diamond (10). Both natural and lab-created morganite share the same Mohs hardness because they share the same chemical composition (beryllium aluminum cyclosilicate with manganese coloring). For everyday fashion jewelry wear, morganite handles daily wear well with standard care. For deep durability discussion specific to engagement contexts, see our morganite engagement rings durability and care guide.
Natural vs. Lab-Created (Simulated) Morganite — The Honest Distinction
Aquamarise offers morganite jewelry in both natural and lab-created (simulated) forms depending on the piece and price tier. Both are legitimate options within fine jewelry; the choice depends on budget, intended use, and personal preference around natural vs. lab-created gemstones.
Natural morganite
is mined from the earth — pink beryl crystals formed naturally over millions of years in deposits across Brazil, Madagascar, Afghanistan, Mozambique, and the United States. Natural morganite carries the geological provenance of a genuine mineral and the price point that reflects mining, sorting, and cutting from rough natural stones. In this collection, natural morganite is standard in solid 14K gold pieces and select gold vermeil pieces.
Lab-created morganite
is grown in controlled laboratory conditions using the same chemical composition (beryllium aluminum cyclosilicate with manganese coloring) as natural beryl. Lab-created stones are chemically and visually nearly identical to natural morganite but cost significantly less because they bypass the mining and rough-sorting stages. Some manufacturers use the terms "simulated morganite," "synthetic morganite," or "lab-grown morganite" — the terminology varies but refers to the same lab-created process. In this collection, lab-created morganite is standard in our sterling silver tier and accessible gold vermeil pieces, making the morganite aesthetic available at price points where natural morganite would be cost-prohibitive.
Which to choose:
for heirloom-grade pieces, anniversary commemorations, or buyers prioritizing natural gemstone provenance, natural morganite (solid 14K gold tier) is the standard recommendation. For everyday-wear fashion pieces, gifts, and budget-conscious purchases where appearance matters more than mineral origin, lab-created morganite delivers the same aesthetic at significantly lower cost. Stone type for each piece is clearly indicated in individual product descriptions — there is no ambiguity at the point of purchase.
What Makes Aquamarise Morganite Jewelry Different
Three factors define the morganite pieces in this collection.
Stone options across budget tiers. Morganite jewelry at Aquamarise is offered with both natural morganite and lab-created (simulated) morganite depending on the metal tier and price point — a transparent approach that makes the morganite aesthetic accessible across a wider range of budgets. Natural morganite is typical in our solid 14K gold tier and select gold vermeil pieces; lab-created morganite is typical in our sterling silver tier and accessible gold vermeil pieces. Stone type for each piece is specified in the individual product description. (See the natural vs. simulated section below for the complete distinction.)
Pink-focused metal pairings. Morganite's pink color has a unique relationship with metal — rose gold creates the most visually unified palette (warm pink-on-pink), yellow gold creates dramatic warm contrast, and white gold or silver preserves the stone's color at full intensity without warm metal influence. We design across all metal options because the choice significantly affects how morganite reads visually.
Range across fashion, statement, and gifting contexts. This collection covers morganite for non-bridal use — fashion rings, layering pieces, pendants and necklaces, drop earrings and studs.
Morganite Jewelry Categories
Morganite Rings (Fashion, Statement, Stacking)
Rings featuring morganite as the center stone outside engagement contexts — everyday wear, statement cocktail rings, stacking ring designs, and signature pieces. Available in sterling silver (typically lab-created stones), gold vermeil (mix of natural and lab-created), and solid 14K gold (typically natural stones) tiers. For broader fashion ring options, see gemstone rings and sterling silver rings.
For morganite engagement rings specifically (with bridal-context settings and engagement-appropriate sizing), see our dedicated morganite engagement rings collection.
Morganite Necklaces and Pendants
Pendants and necklaces featuring morganite as the center stone — typically with stones between 6mm and 14mm in pendant configurations. The pink color reads particularly well as a pendant because it sits against skin tones and clothing in ways that complement most wardrobes. For broader necklace options across stones, see our necklace collection, gemstone necklaces, and sterling silver necklaces.
Morganite Earrings
Earring configurations from minimalist studs (4-6mm stones) through dramatic drop earrings (8-12mm stones). Morganite earrings are particularly popular as gifts because the pink color is broadly flattering across skin tones and ages. For broader earring options, see our earrings collection, gemstone earrings, and sterling silver earrings.
Morganite Cuts
The cut chosen for morganite significantly affects how the stone's pink color and natural sparkle display. The same cut options apply to both natural and lab-created morganite.
Oval cuts — the most popular shape across morganite jewelry. Provides substantial visual real estate and elongated finger lines on rings. See oval gemstone jewelry.
Cushion cuts — rounded square shape reading as soft and vintage-leaning. Particularly suited to morganite because the larger facets emphasize the stone's gentle pink color. See cushion cut gemstone jewelry.
Emerald cuts — rectangular step-cut producing elegant clarity-focused presentation. The step facets emphasize morganite's transparency and clean color rather than maximum sparkle.
Round cuts — traditional brilliant cut, displays maximum sparkle and works particularly well at smaller stone sizes for studs and accent stones.
Pear cuts — combines oval elongation with directional emphasis, suited to drop earrings and pendant configurations.
Asscher cuts — square step-cut with Art Deco aesthetic. See asscher cut gemstone jewelry.
Metal Options — How Each Metal Reads with Morganite
Morganite has an unusually strong relationship with metal choice — the same stone in different metals reads as significantly different pieces.
Rose Gold (Vermeil and Solid 14K)
The most popular pairing for morganite. Rose gold and morganite share the same warm pink color register, producing a visually unified piece where stone and metal complement each other directly. Rose gold vermeil delivers this aesthetic at accessible pricing (typically paired with lab-created morganite); solid 14K rose gold delivers heirloom-grade investment value (typically paired with natural morganite). See rose gold vermeil rings.
Yellow Gold (Vermeil and Solid 14K)
Yellow gold creates striking warm contrast against morganite's pink — the warm metal pulls the pink toward peach and coral undertones. The most historically referenced pairing for morganite, drawing on Victorian and Edwardian setting traditions. See yellow gold vermeil jewelry.
White Gold (Vermeil and Solid 14K)
White gold preserves morganite's pink at full intensity without warm metal influence — produces the cleanest pure-stone color presentation. Suited to buyers who want the pink to be the only warm element in the piece. See gold vermeil jewelry.
Sterling Silver
925 sterling silver creates cool-tone framing similar to white gold at significantly more accessible pricing. The cool metal makes morganite's pink read brighter and more saturated than warm metal pairings. The most accessible tier in this collection, typically paired with lab-created morganite. See sterling silver jewelry.
For complete metal selection guidance, see our precious metal guide, how to choose the best metal guide, 14K vs 18K gold guide, and what is gold vermeil.
How to Choose Your Morganite Stone
Three factors define morganite quality, applicable to both natural and lab-created stones.
Color saturation. Morganite ranges from very pale blush through warm peach-pink to deeper coral-pink. The "best" color is genuinely a personal preference — pale pink reads delicate and ethereal, deeper pink reads more present and saturated. Deeper saturated pink commands premium pricing in natural morganite because it's rarer in nature; in lab-created morganite, deeper saturation is more reliably available because the lab process controls color consistency. Most popular range for everyday-wear jewelry: soft-to-medium pink across both stone types.
Clarity. Morganite is typically eye-clean (no visible inclusions to the naked eye) — one of its appeals as an alternative gemstone. Natural morganite occasionally contains minor inclusions; lab-created morganite is typically inclusion-free due to the controlled growth process. The stone's gentle color helps mask minor inclusions when they do exist.
Cut quality. Morganite responds well to faceted cuts, displaying clear color across the stone without the heavy color zoning that affects some other beryl varieties. Step cuts (emerald, asscher) emphasize transparency; brilliant cuts (round, oval, cushion) emphasize sparkle.
For deeper coverage of morganite's geological characteristics, color grading, and complete stone profile, see our morganite engagement ring guide (which covers complete morganite information applicable across all jewelry contexts).
What Morganite Symbolizes
Morganite carries contemporary symbolic associations centering on love, compassion, emotional healing, and heart-centered energy — the stone is sometimes called the "stone of divine love" in crystal-healing traditions. The pink color naturally connects morganite to romantic and emotional symbolism in ways that more neutrally colored stones don't carry. The stone is associated with the heart chakra in chakra traditions. These contemporary associations apply to both natural and lab-created morganite — symbolic meaning attaches to the stone type and color rather than to mining vs. lab origin.
For comprehensive coverage of morganite's complete spiritual meaning, healing properties, chakra associations, and symbolic traditions, see our complete morganite meaning guide.
Care for Morganite Jewelry
Morganite at Mohs 7.5–8 handles normal daily wear well — both natural and lab-created stones share the same hardness and require the same care. Standard fine jewelry care applies: warm water, mild dish soap, soft cloth or soft brush for cleaning. Avoid harsh chemicals, ultrasonic cleaners with included or treated stones, and prolonged exposure to lotions and perfumes. Store separately from harder gemstones (sapphire, moissanite, diamond) to prevent surface scratching.
For comprehensive durability and care guidance specific to morganite, see our morganite engagement rings durability and care guide (which covers complete morganite care applicable across all jewelry contexts). For complete care across our jewelry range, see our jewelry care guide.
Customization
Morganite jewelry is well-suited to customization because the stone is available in a wide color range and pairs well with multiple metal choices. Common custom requests include: color-specific stone selection (deeper pink, peach-leaning, lighter pastel), choice of natural vs. lab-created stones for the specific design, custom setting design, alternate metals, accent stone choices, custom engraving, and matched jewelry sets (necklace and earring pairs).
Our custom ring builder handles full custom morganite designs from scratch. For complimentary engraving on eligible pieces, see our engraving service. Use our free ring sizer before ordering rings.
Gifting Morganite Jewelry
Morganite jewelry makes a particularly thoughtful gift because the pink color and gentle aesthetic suit a broad range of recipients across ages and styles. The stone's association with love and heart-centered symbolism makes it especially common as romantic gifts (anniversaries, Valentine's Day, milestone occasions). Both lab-created and natural morganite work well as gifts — the choice depends on budget and the recipient's preferences around natural vs. lab-grown stones.
For broader gifting collections, see gifts for her, anniversary gifts, birthday gifts, mother's day gifts, graduation jewelry gifts, heirloom jewelry gifts, meaningful gifts under $100, gifts under $200, gifts under $250, gifts under $500, and our complete all gifts hub.
From the Blog
Morganite Engagement Ring Guide - Everything You Need to Know Before You Buy
Morganite is one of the most distinctive stones available for engagement rings — warmer than diamond, more durable than its reputation suggests, and unlike anything else in the market for...
Morganite vs Diamond Engagement Ring - An Honest Comparison
Most comparisons between morganite and diamond are written by diamond retailers. This one is not. Morganite and diamond are categorically different materials — different optical properties, different geological origins, different...
Morganite Meaning - The Stone, Its Color, and What It Carries
Morganite is a stone of divine love — not romance in the conventional sense, but something quieter and more sustaining. Its meaning is rooted in geology as much as symbolism:...
Morganite Engagement Rings: Durability, Care & Best Settings
Morganite sits at Mohs 7.5–8 — the same hardness as aquamarine and emerald, well above the quartz threshold for daily wear. Its reputation for fragility is undeserved. This guide covers...