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EDWARDIAN JEWELLERY

RINGS A ring is a circle of platinum, gold, silver ,or any other material which can be worn on the finger ,thumb, or toe
It can be plain or gemset.
The band is called the shank and the raised gemset part is called the bezel.
Men and women have worn them since the third millenium BC in both Eastern and Western cultures.
Rings were originally used as money but in Roman times many rings were worn, including a simple guard ring which was used to keep more valuable rings in place.
In the 16th century women wore rings sewn into their dresses or strung on a piece of ribbon around their neck.
Engagement or betrothal rings have been used since Roman times but wedding rings only in the 19th century.
Mourning rings were worn by a loved one in memory of someone who had died.
Keeper rings were the same as guard rings and sergeant rings were given by barristers to officials when they were appointed sergeant at law.
Devotional rings have a holy name or sacred monogram on them.
Papal rings were given to pilgrims visiting the Vatican and Ecclesiastical rings were worn by dignitaries.
Signet rings were used to authenticate documents whilst key rings had the ward of a key on them.

BRACELETS A piece of flexible band or links fastened with a clasp and worn around the wrist
It is called a bangle if it is a rigid construction
Bracelets were first recorded as being worn by the Sumerians in 2500BC.
Egyptians, Greeks and Romans wore bracelets but they were not popular in the Renaissance due to changing fashions and a penchant for long sleeves. By the 19th century they were a very common form of jewellery often being worn several at a time from wrist to elbow.
At the end of the 19th century large numbers of bracelets and cuff bangles were mass produced.The Edwardians favoured more delicate styles and in the 1920s it was again fashionable to wear several at a time.

NECKLACES were worn throughout the ages as a loose ornament around the neck. Chokers are close fitting and sautoirs are worn long.
2500 BC is when the first simple gold necklace was recorded.
The Romans wore bead necklaces and the Egyptions wore broad collars.
The Byzantine era produced necklaces from gold and precious stones and in the Middle ages intaglios, cameos and reliquaries were hung from chains.
In the mid 16th century necklaces were worn longer as necklines were high.
The beginning of the 19th century proved popular for pendants, due to the current fashion in necklines.
The bow was a common theme during the Baroque period and in 1760 necklaces were worn quite high on the neck along with a longer chain or esclavage. In the 1770s and 80s necklaces covering the bosom and filling the neckline were known as festoon necklaces.
At the beginning of the 19th century the fringe necklace evolved. This was a single string of pearls or stones with many pendants hanging from it. Tightly fitting neck chains are known as chokers, which have been used since the 16th century but became very popular in the Victorian age, often consisting of gemset ribbons or many rows of pearls. Queen Alexandra promoted the fashion by wearing a choker and long bead necklaces together. In the 1920s fashions again changed and sautoirs were worn hanging loosely from the shoulders with a tassel or pendant below the waist.

PARURE a parure is a suite of matching jewellery made to be worn together. If there are only a few pieces in the set, the term demi-parure is used. It could consist of a pair of bracelets, earrings, brooch, necklace, ring and possibly a hair ornament as well.

BROOCHES were originally used as a fastener but later as a decorative item. Early examples date from the 4th and 5th century.
From the13th to the 19th century brooches were the most popular form of jewellery. At the end of the 19th century, insects, birds, butterflies and reptiles were popular in the form of brooches. These were often worn as a collection, decorating a hat, a collar and a belt. Bar brooches and circle brooches have retained their popularity up to the present day.

  PINS are simplified styles of brooches consisting of a straight pointed pin with a decorative head, often gemset, enamelled or in the form of an animal or bird.
Towards the end of the 1800s pins featured golf clubs, tennis racquets, horses, foxes etc. Nowadays women have adopted the pin as a lapel decoration to replace the brooch with a smaller fashionable adornment.
Hat pins were used from Victorian times up to the 1940s, they have a much longer pin than the stock pin or tie pin, and had a wonderful and varied selection of tops, from the very plain ball to exotic feathers and multi jewelled tops. Unusual hat pins have now become collectors items.

CAMEOS are made from carved stone or shell. Traditionally sardonyx or other two coloured hard stones were used and have been found from the second century BC to the 21st C. They became very popular during the Renaissance and have retained their popularity in the form of rings, brooches and pendants.
In the 18th Century, cheaper cameos were appearring. Wedgwood started producing moulded stoneware cameos and Bilston produced enamel versions. Also ceramic and glass imitation cameos were becoming increasingly popular as they were more affordable.
In 1805 Napoleon founded a school of stone engraving to promote the production of cameos and had his coronation crown decorated with them. Cameos became so popular that they were imported. Shell cameos came from Sicily and lava cameos from Pompeii.
19th Century cameos often portrayed popular figures such as Sarah Bernhardt, Queen Victoria or other female portraits, whilst earlier pieces showed carved scenes of historical interest, important events or mythology.

EARRINGS Ear decorations have been recorded from the earliest times, usually consisting of a thin hoop passing through a pierced lobe or later with screw or clip fittings.
The Romans favoured large dome shaped earrings and also clusters which were worn through to the Byzantine era with the addition of flat crescents and long drops of gems on a gold wire.
During the Renaissance, both sexes wore earrings as shorter haircuts made them fashionable. Interesting shapes such as Blackamoors, mermaids,fish or plain pearls and pear shaped drops were worn either tied on with a ribbon or pierced with a gold wire.
In the 17th Century, geometric shapes found favour, also long shoulder length silk earstrings with a small pendant attachment. Early 19th Century earrings were simple mounted gemstones, but after 1840 the trend for decorative stamped settings took over.
In the 1860's earrings became talking points featuring novelties such as owls on a branch or monkeys or steam engines but by the end of the century, earrings lost their popularity altogether apart from simple studs.
In the Edwardian era, delicate, simple and elegant platinum set earrings were popular whilst bobbed hairstyles in the Art Deco age made longer more prominent earrings the fashion. In the 30s and 40s clip fittings were made to form chunky stone set cocktail earrings. After world war two the clip fitting was still used for cluster and pendant earrings which needed heavier settings. From the 50's onwards, styles and fittings were many and varied, with women wearing different earrings to suit their dress or their mood.

HEAD DRESSES from ancient times both men and women have worn Diadems often made of gold in the form of a wreath and set with gems and pearls. The bandeau was worn in Italy in Mediaeval times and in western europe from the mid 19th Century to the present day.
It consists of a narrow band that circled the head low on the brow.The Ferronierre was again worn in Italy in the 15th Century and had a central gem worn on the forehead on a band of velvet or silk tied at the back of the head.
In the 19th Century the silk was replaced by a fine gold chain or beads.
Tiara was a term used by the ancient Persians to describe a head dress.
At the end of the 19th Century they were worn by married women in America and Europe and were a part of court society up until the outbreak of world war II.
Tiaras consisted usually of a curved metal band with a central raised piece encrusted with jewels. In Victorian times tiaras would be made to convert into necklaces and brooches.

CUFFLINKS are used to fasten a cuff of a shirt, they come in many styles, some gemset, some enamelled, some of humorous design. Victorian cufflinks were usually gold and quite ornate. The Edwardians favoured more simple designs.

JEWELLERY has been used for trading, decoration and as a symbol of power and wealth. Since civilisation began, rich, powerful, beautiful and ordinary people have adorned themselves.

 
 
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