topaz, sunstone, agate, rutilated quartz, citrine
all sunday (sun) Necklaces »pearl, moonstone, white topaz, larimar, lapis lazuli
all monday (moon) Necklaces »ruby, coral, red jasper, garnet, red sun sitara, tourmaline
all tuesday (mars) Necklaces »The seven weekday gems trace back to Jyotish astrology, where each planet (Graha) governs a day and carries a primary gemstone. Wearing the matching stone is thought to strengthen that planet's influence in the wearer's chart. We stock the classic seven plus widely accepted substitutes, so budget and availability rarely block the tradition.
Start with Sunday ruby necklaces for the Sun (Mohs 9, mostly Burmese and African origin), then see Monday pearl necklaces for the Moon, using freshwater cultured pearls at Mohs 2.5 to 4. Tuesday red coral necklaces cover Mars, while Wednesday emerald necklaces (Mohs 7.5 to 8) speak for Mercury.
Moving through the week, Thursday yellow topaz and yellow sapphire necklaces align with Jupiter, and Friday diamond and white stone necklaces (including clear quartz and white topaz substitutes) carry Venus. Close the cycle with Saturday blue sapphire necklaces for Saturn, set in rhodium-finished sterling.
Every chain, bail and setting is stamped .925. Stones are natural unless a listing states lab-created or simulated, and origin notes appear on the product page where supplier records allow. US orders ship free. If you need help matching a day to a chart, message our team before checkout and we will point you to the right subcategory.
In Vedic tradition the primary gems are ruby (Sunday), pearl (Monday), red coral (Tuesday), emerald (Wednesday), yellow sapphire or topaz (Thursday), diamond (Friday) and blue sapphire (Saturday). Each links to a ruling planet.
Most buyers start with their birth day of the week or a planet a Vedic astrologer has recommended. If you just want to wear a different stone daily, build the set one day at a time from each subcategory.
Yes. All settings are .925 sterling silver and stones are natural unless the listing marks them as lab-created or simulated (for example, CZ stands in for diamond on Friday pieces).
Vedic practice accepts substitutes: red garnet for ruby, moonstone for pearl, carnelian for coral, peridot for emerald, citrine for yellow sapphire, white topaz or quartz for diamond, and iolite or amethyst for blue sapphire.