31 silver beads of graduated sizes strung on black fiber cord. Beads are hollow and each fabricated from two die-stampled halves that are soldered together. Each bead has punched scalloped designs.
The Navajo use primarily silver and turquoise to make jewelry. To the Southwest tribes and even parts of Mexico, turquoise’s color symbolized “the blue of water and the green of growing vegetation, essential conditions for life” (Furst and Furst 1982, 37). Silverworking began after contact with the Spanish, from whom the Navajo stole and traded. By the 1870s, Navajo silversmiths were making jewelry from silver and learning to set stones, particularly turquoise. The Zunis eventually also began creating silver jewelry and created more delicate and detailed designs with turquoise (Furst and Furst 1982, 37-38).
Silver bead necklace with scalloped design on each bead. 60.59. Kravis Discovery Center. circa 1930. Tulsa: Gilcrease Museum, https://collections.gilcrease.org/object/6059 (06/05/2018).
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