Vintage Fred Harvey Navajo Royston Turquoise & Sterling Horse Cuff 7″ wearable
Vintage Fred Harvey Navajo Royston Turquoise & Sterling Horse Cuff 7″ wearable
Highly detailed bracelet displays Navajo arrows and Thunderbird symbols. Very cool bracelet highlights vibrant green turquoise cabochon with gold highlights. Great gift or addition to any jewelry collection.
Condition: Pre-Owned
Price: USD 344.00
Seller: cobcoins (100.0% positive feedback, 663 reviews)
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Item Description from Seller
Vintage Fred Harvey style Navajo Sterling Silver and Royston Turquoise Horse and Arrow Cuff Bracelet! Highly detailed bracelet displays Navajo arrows and Thunderbird symbols. Very cool bracelet highlights vibrant green turquoise cabochon with gold highlights. Bracelet measures 1 inches in width at widest point. It has an inside measurement of 5 1/2 inches plus a gap of 1 1/2 inch =7 interior measurement total wearable circumference. Great gift or addition to any jewelry collection. Very unique piece.
Fred Harvey era jewelry, one is generally speaking about this genre of lightweight and mass-produced jewelry that was made for sale to the Anglo tourist along the Santa Fe railroad lines, in hotels and retail shops run primarily by the Fred Harvey Company. The name, Fred Harvey, is a quite famous one in Southwestern history.
Indian-made jewelry was one of the more popular commodities that the Anglo tourist purchased and brought back home, as it was a wearable token of their travels and of their experiences in the Southwest. However, as traders quickly realized, the Anglo taste in jewelry differed greatly from that of the Native Americans, such as the Navajo Indians. Whereas the Navajo would appreciate heavier, “bulkier” pieces (for example, thicker, larger Sterling Silver bracelets, rings, and necklaces with large turquoise stone settings), the Anglo tourist (and Anglo women in particular) would prefer lightweight examples with smaller elements of ornamentation and stones.
Once Indian jewelers and traders realized the Anglo preference, they began catering to the Anglo tourist’s tastes by producing a full line of lightweight jewelry, much of it mass-produced with the help of specialized machinery and commercial sheet silver. In addition to the consideration of weight, various design elements or symbols were decided upon as standard designs that would decorate most products – the Thunderbird, the arrows (crossed arrows or single arrows), the four-directions symbol, lightning zigzags, arrowheads, etc. It was perceived that these were the symbols that most tourists had in mind as belonging to the Indian realm, and consequently, many Indian jewelers would keep to the use of these symbols instead of adding their own personal touch or incorporating other aesthetics.
Refunds and Exchanges
We do accept returns within 30 days of the purchase of the item. However, the buyer is responsible for shipping the item back to us and that cost will not be refunded. We will refund your money for the item as soon as we receive the item back. Please send the item back to us with tracking.
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