I'm not good at gifts. I want to be clear about that upfront. I'm the person who leaves it too late, panics, and ends up buying something generic that communicates effort without communicating thought. My mum has received more than one scented candle from me over the years. She's always gracious about it. I've always known I could do better.
Her sixtieth birthday was last October. I'd been thinking about it since July, which for me is unusually organised. I wanted something personal — something that showed I'd actually thought about her specifically, not just about the category of "gift for a woman in her sixties." I'd looked at jewellery before and always been put off by the price of anything that felt meaningful, or the impersonality of anything affordable.
Then I found the Gecko birthstone pendant and everything clicked.
Why a Birthstone Pendant
My mum was born in October. Her birthstone is opal — or in crystal form, a pink tourmaline-coloured stone that captures the same iridescent quality. There's something inherently personal about a birthstone that no other jewellery category quite matches: it's specific to her, to the month she was born, in a way that a generic pendant isn't. It says "I know when you were born" which sounds obvious but in gift terms is actually quite meaningful.
The Gecko Jewellery Sterling Silver Crystal Birthstone Pendant is set in sterling silver — not plated, not base metal with a silver finish, actual sterling silver — with an adjustable chain from 41 to 46cm. The plain silver disc on the reverse is ready for engraving, which I had done with her initials and the date of her birthday. At £24.30 it was considerably less than I'd expected to pay for something this considered.
Gecko is the same brand whose curb chain necklace I'd bought for myself earlier in the year. I already knew the quality of their sterling silver and the durability of their pieces. That trust made the decision easy.
The Engraving
I had the disc engraved locally — a jeweller near me did it for a few pounds. The plain disc is a generous size and the engraving came out cleanly. I had her initials on one side and "60" on the other. Simple, but specific to her in a way that a mass-produced pendant can't be.
The combination of the birthstone on the front and the engraving on the back meant that every time she wears it, there are two layers of meaning. The stone is her birth month. The engraving is her birthday. It's a small object that holds a lot.
Her Reaction
She opened it at her birthday dinner. She went quiet for a moment — the kind of quiet that means something rather than nothing — and then she put it on immediately and wore it for the rest of the evening. She's worn it most days since. I know this because she mentions it when we speak, which she doesn't do with gifts she's just being polite about.
She told me it was the most personal gift I'd ever given her. She's right. It is. And it cost £24.30 plus a few pounds for the engraving. I've spent more than that on candles she's been polite about.
The Quality Eight Months On
Eight months of regular wear and the sterling silver hasn't tarnished. The crystal is as bright as it was when I bought it. The chain adjusts smoothly and the clasp is secure. The engraving hasn't worn. Gecko's sterling silver quality is consistent with what I'd experienced from their other pieces — it's built to last rather than to look good in a box.
Who This Is For
Anyone who wants to give a gift that feels genuinely personal without spending a fortune. The birthstone makes it specific to the recipient in a way that most jewellery isn't, the engravable disc adds another layer of personalisation, and the sterling silver construction means it will last. It works for birthdays, milestone celebrations, Mother's Day, or any occasion where you want to give something that says you actually thought about the person.
You can find the Gecko Jewellery Sterling Silver Crystal Birthstone Pendant here. If you're exploring more, these collections are worth a browse:
She said it was the most personal gift I'd ever given her. It cost £24.30. I've been buying the wrong things for years.
— Callum Reid, Glasgow
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