Selection of Handmade Navajo Jewelry Tools [SOLD]

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Artist Unknown

This Navajo man’s silversmithing tools were most likely pawned to the Balcomb family in the 1950s or 1960s and never reclaimed from pawn.  They have passed down in the Balcomb family and now are in the possession of one of the grandchildren.  There are 11 individual tools used in the manufacture of Navajo silver jewelry.  Some of them are stamps used in decorating jewelry and some are punches.  Some of the tools were made from rat tail files, from flat files and other metal objects.

It is rare for a jeweler to pawn tools that he would need when making jewelry.  It is likely that they were pawned after he passed away, and removing them from pawn was not of interest to the member who pawned them.


Condition: selection of Handmade Navajo Jewelry Tools is in original condition

Provenance: from the inheritance of a daughter of the Balcomb family, owners of several art galleries of Native American art and objects in the post-WWII era until the 1970s when they closed their last gallery, who passed these on to her daughter, the current owner.

Recommended Reading:  The Navajo and Pueblo Silversmiths by John Adair, University of Oklahoma Press (1946)

Artist Unknown
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