Labradorite: Physical & Optical Characteristics

Labradorite: Physical & Optical Characteristics

Plagioclase feldspar and directional color

Labradorite: Physical and Optical Characteristics

Labradorite is a calcium-rich member of the plagioclase feldspar series, valued for the internal optical effect called labradorescence. Its color is not a coating or pigment: it is light interacting with microscopic lamellae inside triclinic feldspar.

Plagioclase feldspar An50–An70 range Perfect feldspar cleavage Internal lamellar flash
Labradorite internal lamellae and labradorescence A stylized labradorite slab shows dark gray feldspar, blue-green-gold flash bands, parallel internal lamellae, and angled light rays returning color. angled light parallel lamellae plagioclase body oriented flash
The flash is directional because the internal layers behave like tiny reflectors. The same stone may look gray from one angle and vividly blue-green from another.

Mineral identity

Labradorite is a plagioclase feldspar, usually described as a mid- to calcium-rich member of the albite-anorthite series with a typical anorthite content around An50–An70. Its idealized feldspar formula is often written as (Na,Ca)(Si,Al)4O8, reflecting the sodium-calcium and silicon-aluminum substitutions that define plagioclase.

In ordinary rock-forming form, labradorite may be gray, smoky, brownish, greenish, or pale. In gem form, its significance comes from labradorescence: a blue, green, gold, orange, or violet flash produced inside the crystal by microscopic intergrowths. The body color and the flash are separate visual features; a dark body can create strong contrast, while a pale body may give a softer, moonstone-like appearance.

Mineral group

Labradorite belongs to the feldspar family, specifically the plagioclase series between sodium-rich albite and calcium-rich anorthite.

Composition range

The commonly cited An50–An70 range places labradorite in the calcium-rich middle portion of the plagioclase series.

Crystal system

Labradorite crystallizes in the triclinic system and commonly shows twinning, cleavage, and striations typical of plagioclase feldspar.

Physical and optical specifications

The values below describe typical labradorite. Natural specimens vary with composition, alteration, inclusions, and cutting orientation.

Property Typical labradorite Interpretation
Chemical group Tectosilicate; plagioclase feldspar series. A framework silicate related to albite and anorthite.
Formula (Na,Ca)(Si,Al)4O8; commonly around An50–An70. “An” indicates the anorthite component in the plagioclase series.
Crystal system Triclinic. Often massive or granular in gem rough; discrete crystals are less common.
Body color Gray, dark gray, blackish, brownish, greenish, or pale to white. The body color is distinct from the labradorescent flash.
Streak White. Consistent with feldspar; not usually used on polished stones.
Luster Vitreous; pearly on cleavage faces. Fresh cleavage may show a softer sheen than polished faces.
Transparency Translucent to opaque; rarely near-transparent in thin areas. Most gem material relies on polish and orientation rather than transparency.
Hardness Mohs 6–6.5. Usable in jewelry with care, but softer than quartz and vulnerable to abrasion.
Cleavage Perfect on {001}; good on {010}; angles near 86° and 94°. Cleavage makes sharp impact a greater concern than hardness alone suggests.
Fracture and tenacity Uneven to conchoidal; brittle. Thin corners, drilled holes, and exposed edges require protection.
Specific gravity Approximately 2.69–2.72. Typical of feldspar; much lighter than many metallic minerals.
Refractive index Approximately n 1.56–1.58. Values vary with composition across the plagioclase series.
Birefringence Approximately 0.007–0.013. Thin-section interference colors are usually low, commonly first order.
Optic character Biaxial, commonly negative for labradorite-range compositions. Optic sign can vary near composition boundaries; laboratory context matters.
Fluorescence Usually none to weak. Not a dependable identification feature.
Signature effect Labradorescence. Internal lamellae selectively reflect and interfere with light.
Chemical sensitivity Insoluble in water; avoid acids and harsh cleaners. Acids and aggressive cleaning can etch or cloud feldspar polish.

Optical behavior

Labradorite is optically complex because it combines feldspar twinning, cleavage, low birefringence, and labradorescence. Some of these features are best observed under a microscope; others are visible with a hand lens or by simply rotating the stone in light.

Polysynthetic twinning

Plagioclase commonly shows fine albite and pericline twinning. On cleavage surfaces, this may appear as regular striations that help separate plagioclase from potassium feldspar.

Low interference colors

In thin section, labradorite usually displays low, first-order interference colors because its birefringence is modest.

Extinction angle

Extinction behavior varies with composition and orientation. This is useful in petrography, where plagioclase composition can be estimated from optical measurements.

Directional reflection

Labradorescence is strongest when the polished face and the viewer align with the internal lamellae. A small tilt can change the color dramatically.

Practical observation

To see the effect clearly, use broad angled light and rotate the stone slowly. The brightest flash often appears when the polished face is favorably oriented to the internal lamellae; another face of the same stone may remain subdued.

Labradorescence and color

Labradorescence is produced by submicroscopic intergrowths of slightly different plagioclase compositions. These internal lamellae reflect and interfere with light, reinforcing certain wavelengths and reducing others. The result is a color field that can look like it is suspended below the surface.

Internal unmixing

During slow cooling, subtle chemical differences within the feldspar can organize into very thin parallel layers. These layers are the physical foundation of the optical effect.

Selective reflection

Light entering the crystal reflects from the stacked layers. Depending on spacing, thickness, and angle, blue, green, gold, orange, or violet wavelengths may be reinforced.

Visible flash

When the viewing angle is favorable, the reinforced color appears as a sheet, flare, band, or moving panel across the polished face.

Color stability

The color is structural and generally stable in normal light. Damage to polish, fractures, abrasion, or etching can reduce its clarity and contrast.

Blue and green

Blue and green flashes are common and often broad, especially in dark-bodied material with strong internal layering.

Gold and orange

Warm flashes require favorable layer spacing and orientation. They can appear as separate fields or as transitions through green.

Violet and full spectrum

Violet and multi-hued effects are less common and are especially associated with material where the lamellar system produces several strong color zones.

Crystal habit and textures

Labradorite is more often encountered as masses, grains, and blocky cleavage fragments than as isolated, well-formed crystals. In rocks such as anorthosite, gabbro, and basalt, it may form interlocking feldspar grains or larger plagioclase crystals set in a darker matrix.

Blocky cleavage

Feldspar cleavage can produce flat, reflective faces. These faces may show striations from twinning and a pearly luster distinct from polished cabochon surfaces.

Anorthosite material

Some of the best-known labradorescent material occurs in plagioclase-rich rocks. Individual feldspar domains must still be oriented and polished to reveal the color.

Pale labradorite

Pale or milky labradorite with blue to multicolor sheen is often traded as rainbow moonstone. It is visually moonstone-like but mineralogically tied to labradorite.

Altered feldspar

Cloudy, greenish, or chalky patches can indicate alteration, including saussuritization. Alteration may soften the flash and reduce polish quality.

Identification and look-alikes

Labradorite is best identified by combining feldspar properties with its directional flash. A single feature is rarely enough; body color, cleavage, twinning, hardness, and the behavior of the flash should all be considered.

Material How it differs Useful clue
Labradorite Single plagioclase feldspar with directional internal labradorescence. Regular feldspar cleavage and flash that turns on and off with angle.
Spectrolite High-quality Finnish labradorite associated with intense multicolored flash. A locality-linked name rather than a separate mineral species.
Rainbow moonstone Trade name commonly used for pale labradorite with blue or multicolor sheen. Usually plagioclase labradorite, not classic orthoclase moonstone.
Larvikite A feldspar-rich igneous rock containing flashing feldspar crystals, not a single labradorite crystal. Blue-silver patches appear within a dark, speckled rock fabric.
Oregon sunstone Copper-bearing plagioclase in the andesine-labradorite range, valued for aventurescence and body color. Glittery reflections come from inclusions rather than lamellar labradorescence.
Coated glass or imitation May show surface color without feldspar cleavage, twinning, or natural internal depth. Surface wear, bubbles, coating concentration, and lack of feldspar structure are warning signs.

Simple field approach

Check for feldspar hardness, two cleavages near right angles, possible striations on cleavage faces, and a flash that appears from specific directions rather than coating the whole surface uniformly.

Care, setting, and handling

Labradorite is harder than many decorative stones but remains a cleavable feldspar. The main risks are abrasion, sharp impact, pressure on thin edges, and cleaning methods that attack polish or exploit fractures.

Cleaning

Use lukewarm water, mild soap, and a soft cloth. A soft brush may be used gently on unpolished areas. Avoid acids, abrasive powders, steam, and harsh chemical cleaners.

Jewelry wear

Pendants, earrings, and protected rings are suitable. Rings benefit from bezels or protective settings, especially when the stone has exposed corners or visible fractures.

Storage

Store separately from harder stones such as quartz, topaz, corundum, and diamond. Harder materials can scratch the polish and dull the optical effect.

Heat and cleaning equipment

Avoid sudden temperature changes, steam cleaning, and prolonged ultrasonic cleaning, especially for fractured, included, or assembled pieces.

Observing and documenting the flash

Labradorite is difficult to represent with a single static view because its main feature is angle-dependent. Good documentation should show both body color and peak labradorescence.

Use broad angled light

A low, soft angle of light helps reveal the flash without making the surface look artificially harsh. Very small point lights can exaggerate isolated reflections.

Rotate slowly

Observe where the flash begins, peaks, shifts color, and disappears. The width of that viewing window is an important part of the stone’s character.

Record quiet and active angles

A quiet gray face and a vivid flash face may belong to the same piece. Showing both gives a more accurate impression of the material.

Check polish separately

Micro-scratches, orange-peel texture, pits, and undercut areas can scatter light and make labradorescence look hazy.

Lapidary notes

Cutting labradorite is primarily an orientation problem. The rough may contain excellent internal color, but if the face is not cut to meet the lamellae properly, the finished stone can appear muted.

Orient before shaping

The flash plane should be found before committing to a dome, slab, bead, or freeform. A strong piece is cut so color appears naturally from the intended viewing face.

Protect cleavage

Sawing, grinding, drilling, and setting should account for feldspar cleavage. Thin edges and drilled beads are especially vulnerable to chipping.

Polish matters

A clean polish lets the internal color resolve sharply. Uneven surfaces scatter light and can reduce the perceived saturation of the flash.

Expect directional variation

Even expertly cut labradorite may have a strongest angle. The goal is not omnidirectional color, but an accessible, coherent viewing window.

Frequently asked questions

Is labradorescence the same as color play in opal?

No. Opal color play comes from diffraction by ordered silica spheres. Labradorite’s flash comes from internal feldspar lamellae that selectively reflect and interfere with light.

Why does one side of a labradorite show no flash?

The effect is strongly directional. If the surface is not oriented to the internal lamellae, that face may look gray or subdued even when another face flashes vividly.

Is rainbow moonstone actually labradorite?

In much of the modern gem trade, “rainbow moonstone” refers to pale labradorite with blue or multicolor sheen. It is usually distinct from classic orthoclase moonstone.

Can heat treatment improve labradorite flash?

Labradorite’s flash is structural, not dye-based. Heat and harsh cleaning generally risk damaging polish, clarity, or stability rather than improving the optical effect.

How can larvikite be separated from labradorite?

Larvikite is a rock containing flashing feldspar crystals in a dark matrix. Labradorite is a mineral. Larvikite usually shows separate blue-silver patches in a speckled rock fabric rather than one continuous feldspar face.

Is labradorite suitable for everyday jewelry?

It can be, especially in protected designs. Its hardness is moderate, but cleavage and brittleness mean it should be protected from sharp blows, abrasion, and pressure on exposed edges.

The physical character of labradorite

Labradorite is a feldspar whose beauty depends on structure. Its triclinic plagioclase framework, calcium-rich composition, twinning, cleavage, and microscopic lamellae all contribute to how it behaves in the hand. The stone’s famous blue-green-gold flash is not decoration added to the surface; it is a visible consequence of internal architecture, careful orientation, and light meeting feldspar at the right angle.

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