Juniper Necklace in silver showcasing the molecular structure of juniper camphor.
Close-up of the Juniper Necklace, perfect for science and gin lovers.
Model wearing the silver Juniper Necklace, a unique science-inspired accessory.
Elegant Juniper Necklace in silver, ideal for cocktail lovers and scientists alike.

juniper necklace

silver
|

€ 160

Length

45 cm + 5 cm extender chain included

Choose your extra chain

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Juniper necklace | sterling silver

If you have spent enough time on Juniperus communis to know why the seed cones are technically not berries, and to recognise α-pinene and sabinene as the volatile signature of a working juniper extract, you already know what the pendant carries. The botanical that defines gin. Worn here as a 24 mm sterling silver pendant.

The Botany of Juniper

Juniperus communis is a coniferous shrub or small tree of the Cupressaceae family, distributed widely across the temperate and boreal Northern Hemisphere. The cones often called juniper berries are not true berries but modified seed cones with fused fleshy scales, ripening from green to dark blue-purple over two to three years. The volatile profile is dominated by α-pinene, sabinene, myrcene, and limonene, the same monoterpenes that give gin its characteristic aromatic identity. Juniper has been used as a traditional medicine for diuretic and antiseptic effects for over two thousand years, and the genus Juniperus contains roughly fifty to seventy species depending on the taxonomy used. The botanical's central role in gin distillation traces back to seventeenth-century Dutch genever, where physicians and distillers used juniper-infused spirits as both medicine and beverage. The transition from genever to London Dry Gin in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries kept juniper as the defining botanical.

Who Reaches For This

  • botanists and dendrologists working on conifers or temperate forest ecology
  • ethnobotanists and pharmacognosy researchers tracing traditional plant medicines
  • distillers, gin producers, and beverage scientists working with botanical extracts
  • phytochemists working on monoterpene biosynthesis or plant volatile profiles

For someone who reaches for juniper when the conversation is about Cupressaceae taxonomy or about why genever and London Dry diverged, rather than gin-and-tonic preferences.

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FAQ

Is the juniper pendant for working botanists or for gin enthusiasts?

Both, in roughly equal measure. Working botanists and ethnobotanists buy it as a reference to a plant they study or teach. Distillers and beverage scientists buy it because juniper is the botanical that defines gin and the molecule of their working day. Gin enthusiasts who pick up the pendant tend to do so because they understand the botanical seriously rather than the cocktail casually. The piece works for any of those readings without committing to one.

Why does juniper define gin specifically?

Because seventeenth-century Dutch physicians and distillers used juniper-infused spirits as a medicinal preparation, and the resulting genever crossed the Channel with returning English soldiers in the late seventeenth century. The Gin Act of 1751 and successive London-distilling traditions kept juniper as the legally and culturally defining botanical of the spirit. By the time London Dry Gin emerged in the nineteenth century, juniper-forward formulation had become the regulatory and stylistic anchor that distinguishes gin from other spirits. Other botanicals can be added, but juniper has to lead.

What size is the pendant and what chain comes with it?

925 sterling silver, 24 mm pendant on a 45 cm sterling silver chain (ø 1.8 mm) with a 5 cm extender. Nickel-free and hypoallergenic. Free worldwide DHL Express in 1-5 business days, with all import duties and taxes covered. 30-day “Love It or Return It” returns.

Is there a gold version?

Yes. The same juniper pendant is available in 18K gold vermeil at the same 24 mm size and chain length. Silver tends to suit working botanical and lab use, gold tends to suit a botany graduation, ethnobotany research milestone, or gin-distillery anniversary.

Molecules

Delve into the hidden elegance of science with our meticulously crafted jewelry, inspired by the intricate structures of chemical molecules. Each piece serves as a tactile tribute to the building blocks of life and matter, capturing the allure of atoms and bonds in precious metals. A harmonious fusion of art and science, these creations are more than mere accessories; they're a celebration of the enigmatic beauty that underpins our universe.

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