Elforyn is a modern high-quality bone imitation, and honesty here is part of the material's virtue: it is not natural ivory but an engineered composite of mineral and polymer components, created specifically to reproduce the look and behaviour of ivory without a single legal or ethical question. Elforyn was developed as an ethical alternative for carvers, knife-handle makers, and jewellers, and in the world of worry beads it plays the same role: the beauty of bone without CITES, without extinct species, without compromise of conscience. The material has a warm cream-white tone, a faint natural translucency, and even a hint of texture recalling the structure of real bone — yet it is uniform, stable, and not prone to cracking from humidity swings, unlike real bone and horn. The maker turns and polishes elforyn to a smooth, warm-feeling surface with a soft, non-plastic shine. In the hand the material is light and comfortable, quick to take the warmth of the palm, without the cold syntheticness of cheap plastic. Spun, it sounds soft and quiet, closer to a warm bony tone than to ringing plastic. It builds little of the patina of organic materials, but stability is precisely its strength: it does not yellow, dry out, or need oil. Care is minimal: a wipe with a soft cloth suffices. These beads are an honest, sensible choice for those who want the look and warmth of bone with a clear conscience and no fuss — an ethical, durable, low-maintenance alternative to natural materials.