Site Map
AUTHENTIC NEW, VINTAGE AND DEAD PAWN NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN JEWELRY

We will be unable to ship on March 18, 19 and 20. Shipping will resume on Monday March 22. Sorry for the inconvenience.

Search:
View Shopping Cart / Checkout
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Shipping, Returns, etc. | Mailing List | Tumbleweeds Jewelry Blog
How To Determine Your Ring Size | Bracelet Size Guide | Care of Native American Jewelry | Privacy Policy/Online Security | Gift Certificates


 
All Jewelry
Top Native American Artists
Navajo, Zuni & Hopi Bracelets
Native American Mens Rings
Native American Womens Rings
American Indian Earrings
Necklaces, Pins & Pendants
Squash Blossom Jewelry
Belts, Buckles & Bolos
Dead Pawn Indian Jewelry
Vintage Indian Jewelry
Zuni Jewelry
Navajo Handmade Jewelry
Hopi Jewelry
Santo Domingo Pueblo Jewelry
Calvin Begay Jewelry
New Arrivals
 
 
Tumbleweeds Jewelry
P.O. Box 74
Hibernia, NJ 07842

973-983-9201
sales@tumbleweedsjewelry.com
 
View Shopping Cart/Checkout 

SEARCH
 
 

Hopi Jewelry > Hopi Sterling Silver Overlay Buckle, George Phillips

View additional images

  

Hopi Sterling Silver Overlay Buckle, George Phillips

Hopi Indian sterling silver overlay buckle created by Hopi silversmith George "Phillips" Kyashvenaya. The buckle measures 3" by 2" and fits a belt up to 1-3/4" wide. From the Hopi Arts & Crafts SilverCraft Co-op Guild: Item#1463

$ 265.00     Available: 1     Back


Beautiful new satin finished sterling silver overlay buckle created by Hopi artist George "Phillips" Kyashvenaya . The overlay work is clean, bold and elegant. The buckle has a soft brushed finish and features Prayer feathers, a corn plant and other   symbols. The buckle measures 3" by 2" and fits a belt up to 1-3/4" wide. Weighs 57 grams.

Brand new and in perfect condition! Certificate of Authenticity and gift box included. Hallmarked by the artist and also has the Hopi Arts & Crafts Silvercraft Co-op Guild hallmark.

About the Hopi Arts & Crafts SilverCraft Co-op Guild:

In 1947, after World War II, returning Hopi servicemen were trained at a silversmithing school founded under the G.I. bill.
The late Paul Saufkie, Sr. was the technical instructor and the late Fred Kobotie, noted Hopi artist and designer, taught design. Although many techniques of making silver were used, the overlay style gradually emerged as the dominate style. This simple, unique, elegant jewelry is now considered essentially "the" Hopi style of jewelry.

In 1949, they established a guild with its own hallmark. The Guild's purpose was to produce, purchase, promote, sell handcrafts and jewelry and to operate related activities. The Hopi Arts and Crafts Co-op Guild now has its own building on Second Mesa, Arizona, next to the Hopi Culteral Center & Museum. Any craftsman, potter, basketmaker, weaver or silversmith can have his or her work displayed and sold there. Half the building is devoted to work benches and supplies for the silversmiths.

When you buy from the Hopi Guild, you are buying quality and authentic pieces of jewelry. To assure authenticity, all Guild jewelry bears both the Hopi Guild sun symbol and the individual silversmith's clan mark (hallmark). Authentic Hopi jewelry sold outside of the guild is usually marked with either the silversmith's clan symbol or a registered silversmith's signature or initials.

Please check our latest selection of genuine Hopi silver jewelry. And if you don't see what you want, you can try contacting the Guild directly at:
Hopi Arts & Crafts Co-op Guild
P.O. Box 37 Hwy. 264
Second Mesa, AZ 86043
928-734-2463


Click here to see our Current Ebay Auctions

Get a feed of this website's items RSS Feed

SSL

Share this webpage with a friend SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Copyright © 2008 Tumbleweeds Jewelry, All Rights Reserved

Home | About Us | Contact Us | Shipping, Returns, etc. | Mailing List | Tumbleweeds Jewelry Blog
How To Determine Your Ring Size | Bracelet Size Guide | Care of Native American Jewelry | Privacy Policy/Online Security | Gift Certificates