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Navajo Traditional Teachings

Mohave Turquoise Pendant

Mohave Turquoise Pendant

Regular price $299.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $299.99 USD
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This pendant features a hand-cut Mohave turquoise stone with striking natural variation—soft mint green layered with warm earth tones and matrix that gives it a landscape-like depth. The elongated oval shape allows the stone’s character to fully stand out, making it the clear focal point.

Each pendant is crafted entirely by hand by Roy Huskie Jr., a master Navajo silversmith who began working at just fifteen years old. Raised in Tuba City on the Navajo Nation, Roy learned traditional silversmithing from his father and continues the artistry of his Todích'íí'nii (Bitter Water) clan.

The stone is hand-cut by Roy and set in sterling silver with a clean, understated border that keeps the focus on the turquoise itself. Its natural variation ensures no two pieces will ever be alike.

The back is stamped with “Sterling” and Roy’s hallmark, “RH.”

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A Roy Huskie Jr. Original
Materials: Sterling Silver & Natural Mohave Turquoise

Chain Length:

24.5 inches (62.23 cm)

Pendant Measurements:

Length (including bail): 31 mm
Width (at widest point): 18 mm
Bail opening: 5 mm

Pendant measurements are taken at the longest and widest points.

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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:

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