-40%
Antique Victorian Mourning Plaited Hair GLASS Locket Gold Brooch Pin
$ 5.27
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
DetailsExcellent condition.
Fresh looking, soft wear is noticeable only on close inspection.
Gold plated setting has a bright patina with minor surface wear noticeable on close inspection.
No dents or imperfections to the shape.
Glass panel is gleaming with no chips or surface wear.
Clasp is secure, pin was repaired at some point.
Era Victorian
Length 1 3/4
”
just under
Width 1 1/4
”
Mark No mark
Weight 8 grams
Material Tests for 10k gold plating, glass, human hair
Collector Note
Made by hand or in small groups of similar styles, vintage jewelry is individualistic with its own special history.
Striking example of mourning jewelry, with a full-sized glass panel and locket cache.
Different colors of woven hair indicates it is from two different loved ones and woven together.
Excellent condition showcases the design detail and quality of construction.
BackStory
O
n Mourning Jewelry.
Mourning jewelry from the Georgian and Victorian eras were special, custom pieces designed in the memory of a deceased loved one. While many mourning pieces used dark materials like natural onyx or jet to convey grief, they were often surprisingly hopeful, as the majority of the western world believed they would one day be reunited with their loved one in the afterlife. Pieces incorporated symbols that represented this hope or the characteristics of their loved one, as well as locks of hair or small portraits. Today, collecting and wearing antique mourning jewelry is to honor the memory of a real person and appreciate the sentimentality of a bygone era.
On Victorian.
A young Queen Victoria assumed her role in 1837 and her taste in jewelry quickly became culturally influential, within England and beyond. Her relationship to jewelry was enmeshed with her husband, Prince Albert, who gifted the Queen for their engagement, a snake ring, embedded with an emerald (her birthstone) in its head. Continuing from the Georgian era and intensified by Queen Victoria
’
s
taste, sentimental and figural jewelry was a major trend throughout the Victorian era. When certain ideas and words were deemed too forward or improper to be spoken, jewelry and symbolic meaning was used to communicate what was left unsaid.
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_gsrx_vers_1292 (GS 8.3.6 (1292))