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Sample card Czech Antique Victorian black mourning glass belt or dress buckles

$ 58.08

Availability: 13 in stock
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Czech Republic
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Antique: Yes
  • Brand: czech
  • Style: Mourning
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Ethnic Origin: Czech
  • Jewelry Department: Fashion
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Clasp Type: Buckle
  • Condition: “All of our stock is "New old Stock". The finished products have never been worn and the supplies have never been used. Everything is in original vintage or antique condition as found, unless otherwise described. Our inventory comes from many closed Czechoslovakian jewelry designers and artists and ranges in date from pre 1900 to the 1970's”
  • Era: Victorian
  • Material: Glass

    Description

    Sample card of 3 Antique Vintage Czech Bohemian Victorian mourning jewelry jet black glass belt or dress buckles. Wonderful individual black glass elements soldered onto a tin wirework frame. This style of jewelry originated in the 1860's but had a resurgent period in 1901 after the death of Queen Victoria and had all but finished by 1903. The principal maker of this style of jewelry was Gebruder Feix of Albrechtice in the Jizera mountains.
    This is of museum quality and similar buckles can be found in The museum of glass and jewelry in Jablonec nad Nisou where there is a black costume jewelry exhibition.
    Origin: N. Bohemia / Czech Vintage 1900's
    Size: 64 - 74mm 2.5" - 2.9"
    Material: Metal base. Glass.
    Condition: Excellent vintage condition.
    Quantity: 3 on card
    The idea of imitating precious jet started in the 19th century. Production of glass "jet" began in the Jablonec area in the 1860's. Originally, the pressed glass was bonded with resin on to a solid metal base. After 1877, Gebruder Feix patented the riveting of glass stones onto metal bases. However, the real revolution came in the 1880's when production began by tin-soldering glass stones with sealed metal tubes on to a wire base. The boom in black costume jewelry making in Czech continued until the turn of the century and by the 1910's had virtually gone out of fashion.