Our current 6 bracelets: a material-by-material breakdown

Six Kinsoul bracelets laid out — material-by-material breakdown

Kinsoul Energy makes six bracelets: Ember, Serenity, Aura, Obsidian, Terra, Soleil. Priced $139 to $365. Each is hand-assembled in our small California studio from natural stones and pearls sourced from six countries — strung on elastic cord, with no clasp. Here's a material-by-material breakdown, so you can decide by what's inside, not just how it looks.

What's in every Kinsoul bracelet

Six pieces, one set of shared specs. Every bracelet uses S925 sterling silver components, crafted by a California silversmith workshop. Each sits on a single fine elastic cord — no clasp, no fuss, slip it on. Sizes come in S (6.1"/15.5 cm), M (6.7"/17 cm), L (7.3"/18.5 cm), and XL (7.9"/20 cm), with M fitting most wrists.

Every order ships in our signature gift box with a letterpress-printed stone meaning card, a replacement elastic cord, a care guide, an authenticity certificate, and a cotton pouch — no extra charge, no extra steps.

Ember — Persian red agate + freshwater pearl silver bars ($228)

Bold and sculptural. Ember is built around large hand-cut Persian red agate stones from Iran's Kerman province, paired with slender freshwater pearl silver bars (20–30 mm) in a coral-like rhythm. The pearls come from Zhuji, China — the heart of freshwater pearl cultivation. In many traditions, red agate is carried for confidence, vitality, and grounding.

Shop Ember →

Serenity — Bolivian amethyst + freshwater threaded pearls ($168)

The quietest piece in the collection. Serenity uses natural amethyst hand-cut into freeform shapes, sourced from the Andes in Bolivia — a region known for its deep violet tones. Threaded between the stones are 8.3–9.2 mm freshwater pearls from Zhuji. Amethyst has been associated for centuries with calm, clarity, and intuition.

Shop Serenity →

Obsidian — Black agate + tourmalinated quartz ($208)

Quiet protection. Obsidian pairs deep black agate from Mexico with tourmalinated quartz from Brazil — clear stones threaded with fine black needle-like inclusions, like nature's brushstrokes caught in crystal. Soft grey freshwater rice pearls (8 mm) from Zhuji run between them, anchored by a single baroque pearl at the center. Black agate has traditionally been carried for inner resolve.

Shop Obsidian →

Terra — Persian banded agate + Australian baroque saltwater pearl ($264)

A study in slow time. Persian banded agate from Iran's Kerman province is formed over millions of years, giving each stone its own geological fingerprint of stripes, soft browns, and warm cream tones.

Paired with a generous baroque saltwater pearl from Australia and antique-finished S925 sterling silver spacers that echo the warmth of the stones. Banded agate is a traditional symbol of stability and earth connection.

Shop Terra →

Soleil — Brazilian citrine + clear quartz + amethyst + freshwater round pearls ($139)

The warmest piece and our entry point. Soleil centers on Brazilian citrine (the mineralogical name for yellow quartz) from Uruguay, framed by clear quartz tips from China's East Sea and deep amethyst rounds from Bolivia. Threaded with small freshwater round pearls from Zhuji. Citrine is a traditional symbol of warmth, creative energy, and optimism.

Shop Soleil →

Aura — 8 of 12 natural stones + Australian baroque saltwater pearl ($365)

The most complex piece in the collection. Aura draws from a curated palette of twelve natural stones: tiger's eye, lapis lazuli, amethyst, citrine, amazonite, clear quartz, tourmalinated quartz, red agate, prehnite, grey agate, blue apatite, and agate accent beads.

Eight stones are selected by hand for each individual bracelet, anchored by a single large baroque saltwater pearl from Australia. No two Auras share the same combination.

Shop Aura →

Why we only make six

Six bracelets. No seasonal drops, no new colorways each quarter. This is a choice, not a constraint.

The work is slow. Every stone has to be cut, polished, and hand-selected before it goes on a bracelet. Material cost runs between 35% and 50% of retail, depending on the piece. We'd rather do six things well than twelve things quickly — and the six are our full current lineup, not a "starter collection."

Persian red agate from Kerman province runs roughly 2.5× the cost of Indian red agate. Baroque saltwater pearls from Australia run about 1.5× the cost of freshwater baroque. We picked the materials we thought mattered for each design — these are the decisions you're feeling when you turn a Kinsoul bracelet in your hand.

How to decide which one is yours

Each of the six carries its own weight. If you want to narrow down by feeling, budget, or occasion, we wrote a separate How to choose your Kinsoul bracelet guide. Or skip straight to the 3-question stone quiz — we'll match you to the piece that fits how you want to feel.

If you want to see them side by side, we keep a full comparison table with every material, price, and wear note.

Questions about sizing, gift-wrapping, or materials? Visit Client Care or email us at hello@kinsoulenergy.com. We respond within 24 hours.


Sources:

By the Kinsoul Studio team · Edited by Kevin · Verified by LU for material accuracy and brand voice.

Frequently asked

What makes Kinsoul bracelets different from mass-produced gemstone bracelets?
Each Kinsoul bracelet is hand-assembled in our California studio from natural stones and pearls sourced from six countries — not factory-strung from lab-created beads. Every stone is cut, polished, and selected individually before it goes on a bracelet. A skilled maker assembles between 3 and 5 pieces in a day.
Are all the stones in Kinsoul bracelets natural?
Yes. Every stone in every Kinsoul bracelet is a natural gemstone — no synthetic, no lab-grown, no dyed substitutes. We hand-select each stone from raw material and order small batches monthly rather than stockpiling.
How long does each Kinsoul bracelet take to make?
It depends on the piece. A simpler bracelet like Soleil takes about 1.5 to 2 hours to assemble. An Aura — built from 8 stones drawn from a palette of 12 — takes around 5 hours, making it the slowest piece in our lineup.

From the Studio

The Kinsoul Studio team

This article was written by our Kinsoul Studio team from our small California studio, edited by Kevin (Content Editor), and verified by LU (Founder & Designer) for material accuracy and brand voice.

We use internal tools to support research and drafting. Every published piece is substantively reviewed and edited by a named human editor with material verification by the founder.

Read our full editorial process →