Skip to product information
1 of 3

Navajo Traditional Teachings

Tiger Heart & Turquoise Necklace

Tiger Heart & Turquoise Necklace

Regular price $274.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $274.99 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity

This necklace brings together the vivid beauty of natural turquoise with the warm, glowing depth of tiger eye. Smooth turquoise nuggets carry bright blue tones with natural matrix throughout, while the tiger eye beads — including the larger heart-shaped focal stones — add rich golden browns that catch the light like sun across desert stone. The contrast creates a strand that feels both lively and grounded, with each element placed in quiet balance.

Each bead in this piece has been carefully selected and arranged by hand by Navajo artist Darlene Huskie. With decades of experience in traditional beadwork, her work reflects a steady, practiced hand and a deep understanding of balance, spacing, and natural materials. The placement of each stone is intentional, allowing the colors and textures to speak without distraction.

Wearing a piece like this brings an effortless sense of warmth and presence — something that feels just as natural with everyday wear as it does when you want to stand out a little more. It’s the kind of necklace that draws attention quietly, without needing to try.

A Darlene Huskie Original
Materials: Stabilized Turquoise, Tiger Eye, Silver Clasp
Length: 24.5"

View full details

Meet The Artist

Meet Darlene... Navajo Jewelry Artist

Darlene Huskie is a Navajo jewelry artist with nearly three decades of experience creating hand-strung turquoise necklaces and traditional Diné adornment. Taught within her husband’s family, she carries forward a lineage of beadwork that blends patience, precision, and cultural memory.

Working with turquoise, sterling silver, shell, and glass beads, Darlene carefully selects and arranges each element by hand, allowing color, balance, and natural beauty to guide every design. Her pieces are not mass-produced — each necklace is individually made, reflecting the quiet skill and steady hands of an artist who has spent a lifetime perfecting her craft.

Darlene is of the Nakai Diné Clan, and her work reflects the enduring Navajo tradition of jewelry as both personal adornment and cultural expression.

Authentic Turquoise

With only 5 active turquoise mines left in the U.S.—led by the iconic Kingman Mine—much of today’s turquoise comes from past sources. Check the map… your piece may be rarer than you think.

Turquoise Map
Turquoise Image - HOW WE TEST TURQUOISE (1).png__PID:e168d8da-60b9-4339-b338-c7c4fb7f5336

How We Test Turquoise

Testing is a skill. Some pieces of turquoise you can tell right when you pick them up. Others require a more scientific approach. Click here to See The 4 Ways To Test Turquoise:

Read More