Handcrafted Jewelry
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History
Of Handcrafted Jewelry
By Native Americans
While the art of Indian handcrafted silver jewelry has
flourished in the 20th century, all Indian jewelers can trace their art to
a Navajo named Atsidi Saani, who learned blacksmithing at
Fort Defiance, Arizona, in the 1850s. (It is generally believed that the
Spanish colonizers of the Southwest purposely kept the techniques of metal
working from the region's native peoples.)
When Navajo people returned to their beloved mesas and
canyons in 1868, following the four-year internment at Bosque Redondo,
their new, more settled way of living led to many changes. Among other
things, as they were no longer nomadic, they had greater opportunity to
learn from each other. The People had long admired and used metal
ornaments and horse equipment. They had used brass and copper wire to
create bracelets and coins to fashion buttons. Atsidi Saani applied his
metal working techniques, as appropriate, to silver, and he began to teach
others.
Tools were crude. Smiths improvised and created their own
crucibles, bellows, and emery paper. A smith may have only had a hammer
and a piece of scrap railroad track for an anvil. Silver coins were melted
or annealed into use. The Mexican peso soon gained new favor among smiths
because it had a higher silver content than American coins.
By the 1890s, traders took advantage of the new market
with silversmiths and began selling tools and silver slugs.
Silver jewelry also served as barter on the Reservation
where money was practically non-existent. Traders took silver and
turquoise jewelry as collateral, without giving a specific value to the
piece, and the customer's purchase debt was secured by the jewelry. Any
pawn unclaimed after the agreed period of not less than six months was
considered "dead" and the trader could sell it.
After 1950, the use of pawn as collateral was prohibited
on the Reservation; however, it continues to exist today on the borders of
the Reservation.Older Indian jewelry (1880-1900) may appear crude by
today's standards. Collectors of these pieces look for raised designs
created with files and chisels and not repoussé.
(Repoussage is the art of working the back of the
metal, usually with a hammer or stamp, producing raised surfaces such as
the rounded concha). As the smiths acquired better tools, they produced
more elaborately decorated pieces.
After 1950, the use of pawn as collateral was prohibited
on the Reservation; however, it continues to exist today on the borders of
the Reservation.Older Indian jewelry (1880-1900) may appear crude by
today's standards. Collectors of these pieces look for raised designs
created with files and chisels and not repoussé. (Repoussage
is the art of working the back of the metal, usually with a hammer or
stamp, producing raised surfaces such as the rounded concha). As the
smiths acquired better tools, they produced more elaborately decorated
pieces.
By 1899, the Fred Harvey Company was supplying sheet metal
and pre-cut, polished turquoise to smiths through the trading posts. The
smiths then sold back to Harvey a supply of cheaply-made souvenir jewelry
for tourists.
Soon, the Harvey Company was commissioning Indian-style
machine-made jewelry. Indians may or may not have been employed for the
handwork on these assembly-line pieces. Other manufacturers followed,
producing earrings, bracelets, rings, brooches, pins, money clips,
commemorative spoons and other trinkets. Collectors of this souvenir
jewelry--often called "Harvey House" or "workshop
jewelry"--look for its machined-tooled precision and uniformity,
affectation of an Indian style, and relative delicate lines. The pieces
were generally small, sized to sell cheaply. Turquoise, when used, was
treated or coated to harden and enhance color. Designs were usually
stamped, and common motifs were thunderbirds, lightning, and bows and
arrows.
The differences between authentic and imitation silverwork
are subtle, a condition exacerbated by the tendency of smiths to copy what
is the most successful or profitable, and to lower their standards for
tourists who are often looking for cheap mementos.
By the early 1900s silver jewelry continued to change,
reflecting significant advances in tools and technology. Repoussé
improved as the smiths learned to temper and harden their tools. Also,
stamp work increased as jewelers acquired the technology and supplies to
make the stamps. This form of working the metal from the front was quickly
adapted as a favored technique to accentuate repoussage or to
stand alone.
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