THIS LISTING IS FOR A PAIR OF CLIP-ON EARRINGS!
Teardrop 1⅛” x ¾”
For those who do not have pierced ears these are yours. Two perfectly matched Kingman turquoise teardrops, each measuring 1⅛” x ¾”, vivid aqua-teal with warm golden matrix moving through each stone in the bold, confident sweeps that make Mineral Park material so immediately recognizable. Set in oxidized .925 sterling silver with a full hand-twisted rope border, the teardrop bezels frame each stone with the classic Southwest silverwork tradition that this material has earned over a thousand years of use.
The clip-on backs are secure and comfortable the kind of finding that stays in place through a full day without the pinching that lesser hardware delivers. At 1⅛” these earrings have genuine presence not small studs but real statement teardrops that wear with the same authority as their pierced counterparts. The twisted rope border, the oxidized silver, the vivid blue stone none of that changes because of how they fasten. Everything that makes these earrings worth wearing is still entirely here.
Details:
Stone: Kingman Turquoise · Origin: Arizona · Matrix: Turquoise & Tans · Metal: Custom Sterling Silver · Earrings Setting: · One of a Kind with Makers Mark
Made in Taos by a Taosena.
Some Jewelry is made. Some is found. At Fire & Stone, it's both.
CLIP-ON Kingman Turquoise Earrings
The Kingman mine sits in Mineral Park, Mohave County in northwestern Arizona one of the oldest and most storied turquoise operations in North America. Archaeological evidence places turquoise mining at Kingman as far back as 1000 AD, when Ancestral Puebloan and Mojave peoples worked the deposit long before European contact. The mine has been in continuous or near-continuous production ever since, making it one of the longest-running turquoise sources on the continent.
What distinguishes Kingman turquoise is the exceptional range and consistency of its color a vivid, saturated blue that collectors and silversmiths have prized for generations. Kingman produces some of the bluest turquoise in the world, ranging from bright robin’s egg and sky blue to deeper Persian blue, often with a distinctive black, brown, or silver matrix that provides striking contrast against the stone’s saturated ground. The water web Kingman where fine silver and black matrix forms a delicate web across the surface of the stone is among the most coveted turquoise formations anywhere, sought by serious collectors and commanding significant premiums over unmarked material.
Kingman turquoise is natural and genuine the mine produces both stabilized material for the commercial market and high grade natural stones for collectors and artisan jewelers who insist on untreated material. The distinction matters. Natural Kingman holds its color without treatment, a testament to the mineral stability of the deposit and the quality of the stone coming out of the ground.
The Mineral Park mine has passed through several ownership periods over the decades and production has been inconsistent periods of active mining followed by closure, each reopening producing new material of sometimes dramatically different character. What comes out of Kingman today is not guaranteed to look like what came out twenty years ago. Each period of production has its own signature. This stone carries the Kingman name because it earned it in the ground, in the color, and in the hands of a Taoseña who knows the difference.

