Shop for Beads & Supplies:
This week: Save on 2,000 Tiny Treasures

Sodalite Round 4mm

Sodalite Round 4mm
Sodalite Round 4mm
Sodalite Round 4mm
View the Strand Variance
Inches Sodalite Round 4mm Cemtimeters Reference coins
Size chart

Availability & Pricing

15-16" strandSave 24%
$4.70$3.57
½ strand (loose)Save 25%
$2.60$1.95

About this item

Lima recommends using .019" or .021" jewelry wire for stringing. Jewelry/Beading wire is strong but has the softness and flexibility of thread.

Item # 521
Beads per strand (approximately) 86
Hole size 1mm
Loading...

More about Sodalite

Our home state of Michigan is firmly team ‘Pop’ in the American soft drink debates, but we at Lima Beads are comfortable calling this gorgeous blue stone by its true name - SODAlite. Known for thousands of years to Indigenous Peoples in South America, Sodalite didn't become popular worldwide until the late 1800’s when a large deposit was discovered in Ontario, Canada. Princess Patricia, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, chose Sodalite as interior decoration for Marlborough House in England after a visit to Ontario. Because of her influence, an alternative name for this beautiful gemstone is Princess Blue.

Sodalite was named for its sodium content, not for sugary drinks. It is a member of the feldspathoid mineral family. Sodalite stones can vary in color, but those used in jewelry are shades of royal blue with white inclusions. Sodalite and lapis lazuli are often confused, but sodalite has no pyrite inclusions. Sodalite is often a component of lapis lazuli. While sodalite can be found in many locations around the world, significant quantities are located in Maine, Arkansas, and Canada.

Sodalite is said to promote intuition, and encourage decisiveness and rationality.

» More Sodalite