About
Malachite has historically been worn as a healing gemstone. It was used as a protection against the evil eye and given to children to wear to protect them from having nightmares. Even today there are people who use Malachite as a gemstone for holistic and spiritual purposes.
The Winter Palace landmark of St. Petersburg, Russia, contains one of the most outstanding displays of this gemstone in a room called the Malachite Room. This room, designed in the late 1830's, includes a fireplace, large columns, urns, and decorative vases made entirely of Russian Malachite. It was designed as a formal reception room for Russian Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna, wife of Czar Nicholas I, and used as her drawing-room as well as a gathering place for the Imperial family for official functions.
Due to its relative availability in copper deposits today, Malachite has become inexpensive and easily obtainable. Malachite sometimes forms together with blue Azurite, and this contrasting blue and green formation of both these minerals is known as Azure-Malachite.
Uses
Varieties
✓ common · ✗ uncommon
- Azure-Malachite— Mixture of blue Azurite and green Malachite.

