Orgonite is a composite material made from resin, metals, and crystals — typically cast into geometric forms like pyramids, discs, and towers. It was developed in the early 2000s by Karl Hans Welz and later popularised by researcher Don Croft, building on the foundational work of Austrian scientist Wilhelm Reich, who in the 1930s and 40s identified what he called "orgone energy" — a universal life force present in all living matter.
Reich observed that organic materials attract and hold orgone energy, while metallic materials repel it. Orgonite works on this principle: alternating layers of organic resin and inorganic metal create a continuous cycle of attraction and repulsion, which Reich's followers believe cleanses and balances the energy field around it.
What goes inside orgonite?
Every piece of orgonite contains three core components. The resin acts as the organic matrix, holding everything together and creating the energetic tension. Metal shavings — typically copper, brass, steel, or aluminium — provide the inorganic layer that interacts with the resin. Crystals, most commonly quartz, are added for their piezoelectric properties: when compressed inside curing resin, quartz generates a small but measurable electric charge, which many believe amplifies the orgonite's energetic output.
Additional crystals like amethyst, shungite, lapis lazuli, and black tourmaline are often included for their individual properties — shungite for EMF absorption, amethyst for calm and clarity, tourmaline for grounding.
Why do people use orgonite?
The most common uses are EMF mitigation, energy balancing, and environmental harmonising. As our homes and workplaces fill with Wi-Fi routers, smart meters, and 5G infrastructure, many people are seeking ways to counteract the effects of electromagnetic pollution. Orgonite is placed near devices, on desks, in bedrooms, and in gardens as a passive, low-maintenance tool for doing so.
Beyond EMF, many users report improved sleep, reduced stress, and a greater sense of calm in spaces where orgonite is present. While these effects are subjective and not clinically proven, the growing global community of orgonite users — and the consistent quality of their experiences — speaks for itself.
Why quality matters
Not all orgonite is equal. The ratio of metal to resin, the quality and authenticity of the crystals, and the care taken during casting all affect the final piece. Mass-produced orgonite often uses low-grade materials or skips key components entirely. At True Orgonite, every creator is vetted for their materials, their process, and their intention — because we believe the energy of the maker matters as much as the materials themselves.
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