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Vintage Turquoise Jewelry

Vintage Turquoise Jewelry

Vintage Turquoise Jewelry

Vintage Turquoise Jewelry

Turquoise Jewelry has been made by Native American Indians of the Southwestern United States since approximately 1860. Vintage Turquoise Jewelry has become highly collected and sought after by American Indian Historians and collectors of Western Americana. Collectors of Antique American Jewelry appreciate Antique Turquoise Jewelry and consider Vintage Turquoise Jewelry to be an important era of American History. There are many different types of Vintage Silver Jewelry.

Antique Navajo Turquoise Jewelry is most dominate when collecting Vintage Turquoise Jewelry followed by Zuni, Santo Domingo and Hopi. The Navajo Indians were the most ambitious in making Turquoise Jewelry in the early years and as it became more popular near the turn of the 19th century the Zuni Indians began making their style of Turquoise Jewelry. The Santo Domingo Indians of the Rio Grande Valley were making Turquoise Bead Necklaces early on (pre 1860) and were trading them to the Navajo as well as in Santa Fe.

Native American Turquoise jewelry began showing up in Navajo Jewelry around 1880, which was shortly after they began working with Silver. The first Vintage Turquoise Jewelry made by the Navajo Indians was fairly crude in today's standards as they made their Jewelry in open fire pits with bellows and ancient tools. Early antique pieces of Turquoise Jewelry were made by melting Silver coins, pouring them into ingots and hammering the ingots out into sheet and wire to be make into Jewelry. Vintage Turquoise Jewelry made from ingots is now very rare, highly collected and expensive.

As demand for American Indian Turquoise Jewelry grew from the advent of tourism and Indian Traders bringing Turquoise Jewelry to the west coast to market it, Indian Jewelry became more refined. Sophisticated tools and gas torches started showing up around 1900-20 and quickly spread throughout the Indian Reservations of the Southwest and higher production of Turquoise Jewelry began. The Vintage Turquoise Jewelry from the 1900-1940 period is also highly collected as it to was totally made by hand with natural American Turquoise.

The Turquoise used in Antique Turquoise Jewelry plays an important roll in collecting Vintage Turquoise Jewelry as well. Turquoise has a completely different appearance from individual Turquoise Mines. Educated Vintage Turquoise Jewelry collectors can pinpoint the date the Vintage Jewelry was made by the type of Turquoise that was used in the Jewelry. Some of the early Turquoise Mines were the Cerrillos Turquoise Mine, Manassa Turquoise Mine, Number 8 Turquoise Mine, Blue Gem Turquoise Mines, Morenci Turquoise Mine and the Kingman Turquoise Mine.

You can find more information on Turquoise Mines in our Turquoise Mines List and you can also find additional information on Vintage Turquoise Jewelry at our sister site. Durango Silver Company sells Vintage Turquoise Jewelry and have been noted as being leading authorities on Antique Turquoise Jewelry for decades as John Hartman has been a collector of American Frontier Items and his specialty has always been Antique American Indian Turquoise Jewelry.


Vintage Turquoise Jewelry Examples

Ingot made Antique Turquoise Jewelry - Ingot Bracelet Ingot Turquoise Bracelet - Antique Turquoise Jewerly

These two Antique Turquoise Bracelets were both Navajo Indian made from ingots of Coin Silver. The Navajo Indians would obtain U.S. Coin Currency from the U.S. Calvary than the Indian Traders, melt them down and pour them into ingots, which are Silver bars. They would than pound them out into sheet, in this case, and then work the silver with steel tools that they made themselves as well. The tools were made from the steel rims of the wagon wheels, old steel files and blacksmith steel. Blacksmithing started many years prior to Silversmithing. Atsidi Sani, believed to be the first known Navajo Silversmithbegan as a Blacksmith forging steel.

To the left - Is an unusual Vintage Turquoise Ingot Bracelet, the Silver was pounded out of an ingot into sheet, it was then worked and two pieces of sheet were forged together in a fire pit to make the Bracelet Frame. The Silver was then stamped and bezels were applied to accommodate The Turquoise Stones. This what is considered super classic vintage Turquoise jewelry.

To The right - Is a heavy, hand forged, Coin Silver Turquoise Ingot Bracelet with early Kingman or Morenci Turquoise. This Vintage Turquoise Jewelry Bracelet with hand sawed from an Ingot into The desired shape, hand stamped and bent to shape, then bezels were forged on the bracelet frame in an open pit fire with the use of bellows and solder made from mixing tin with silver. The Navajo would make the bezels fit the stones, then would strap them to the bracelet Frame with thin steel wire to hold them into place while heating it up in the fire to forge the pieces together. This is the processed used in most of the first phase vintage Turquoise jewelry.

Turquoise Ingot Bracelet - Antique Turquoise Indian Jewelry Vintage Navajo Turquoise Bracelet

These photos show two Vintage Turquoise Cuff Bracelets from different periods of time.

To The left - The Navajo Cuff Bracelet on The left was made from Coin Silver that was poured into and ingot and pounded into sheet silver. The beaded designs around The Turquoise Stones are made by heating small pieces of silver to a molten state on a charcoal block - they ball up when they become molten. The Bracelet was wired together with fine steel wire, put into a blacksmith furnace and forged together with a Silver and Tin mixture. The Turquoise Stones were probably hand cut, sanded and polished on The Navajo Silversmith's leg. It was made between 1900 and 1930.

To The right - The Turquoise Cuff Bracelet was made at a much later date as it was made with factory fabricated Sterling Silver Sheet and wire that was purchased from a Trading Post or Jewelers Supply Company. This vintage Turquoise jewelry bracelet is a very nice second phase piece of Navajo Turquoise Jewelry that was made in a more refined and desired design of the 1930's to The 1950's. The Turquoise Stone looks like it came from the Tonopah, Nevada area - probably the Tonopah Blue Gem Turquoise Mine. This stone was cut with lapidary machines which is detected by the professional cut and the high polish of the stone.

Vintage Turquoise Jewelry Vintage Zuni Indian Turquoise Pin

Hear are two beautiful Zuni Vintage Turquoise Pins made 1930-1950 period. The Zuni Indians are famous for their stonework such as their Inlay Jewelry, and in particular Needlepoint or Petit Point cut Turquoise Stones. These particular Vintage Pins have Petit Point cut Turquoise Stones that were cut by The artists that made each individual piece. Today Zuni Jewelry is some of the most popular silver jewelry in the world.

More Vintage Turquoise Jewelry

Antique Turquoise Thunderbird Pin Vintage Zuni Inlay Pin

To The left - A Navajo handcrafted Vintage Thunderbird Pin that was handcrafted from Sterling Silver sheet that was traded for by The Silversmith at The area Trading Post of Jewelry Supply Post. It is uniquely hand stamped and has a hand cut Turquoise Stone, it was made between 1920-1940.

To The right - A Zuni handcrafted Vintage Turquoise Inlay Pin in a Wing Knife Design. It has Inlay Turquoise, Coral, Mother of Pearl and Jet Stones and was made between 1930-1950.

Vintage Navajo Concho Vintage Santo Domingo Turquoise Beads

To The left - An old Navajo Concho, probably from a Vintage Concho Belt, that was turned into a Western Belt Buckle. This Vintage Concho was handcrafted from Sterling Silver sheet. It has a reposed, fluted center that was stamped in a two piece hand made die set. The Silversmith would anneal The Silver to a dead soft state, put it over a female cut stamp and with a sledge hammer pound The male stamp onto The Silver Sheet driving it into The female part of The stamp that has The recessed flutes. Outside to The fluted center is a chased Silver Ring Design and then scallop stamped and filed edging. The Silver Concho was originally made between 1930-1950 period.

To The right - Is a Vintage Santo Domingo Chunk Turquoise Bead Necklace. It was hand cut from raw Turquoise that probably came out of The Cerrillos Hills just north of The Santo Domingo Pueblo. The Turquoise Nuggets were hand polished by rubbing them in sand to a rounded state and then finishing them to a polish with a piece of leather on their leg. The round beads were ground round on sandstone rocks that are native in The Santo Domingo Pueblo area. The holes were drilled with crude hand drills made of wood and string with a handmade steel drill bit hammered from a piece of steel. This Vintage Turquoise Bead Necklace was made between 1910-1940.

Vintage Turquoise Ring Vintage Turquoise Earrings

To The left - A Vintage Turquoise Ring Navajo handcrafted about 1940. It has a nice Battle Mountain area Turquoise Stone and was made in a classic old style of that period - twisted wire, rain drops and a three prong ring shank accented with raindrops.

To The right - A classic pair of Vintage Turquoise Earrings that are Zuni Indian made with squash blossoms and beautiful Battle Mountain Blue Gem Turquoise. This style of Turquoise earring was made from 1930-1950 and were made for tourists as well as The Native American Indian women.

Learn more about Vintage Turquoise Jewelry


We hope you have enjoyed our presentation and have gained some useful knowledge from it. You can learn more about Vintage Turquoise Values by visiting our page on Vintage Turquoise Jewelry Values. We invite you to learn more about Turquoise and Turquoise Jewelry by following the links in our Learning Center to other informational pages that we have written on different topics related to Turquoise Jewelry. In addition, we would like to invite you to join our E-Mail Newsletter - about once every other month we send out a Newsletter to inform our members of what's happening with Durango Silver Company, new products, specials for our members and more. We also have a monthly drawing from our member base to give away free Turquoise Jewelry from our company. Please take a moment to become one of our friends by signing in below. Thank you for reading about Vintage Turquoise Jewelry.

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