Victorian Selfie

Joden Girl

Baubles, Bling, and Carved Things

Grab your phone, strike a pose, and click!  Selfie!  In less than a second, you can capture a lasting impression.  But in the 1890’s, it took just a bit longer.  While photography was quite popular and widespread, it wasn’t instantaneous.  Instead, artisans took time, perhaps even months to create the perfect image… various methods were employed including miniature paintings, intaglio, and cameos.  Our extensive collection of antique jewelry boasts more than 200 of these tiny masterpieces, including this beauty…

There are two primary types of these vintage carvings – those sculpted from seashells and those cut from hard stones like agate.  This one is the latter, a late Victorian likeness etched from a bi-color piece of banded agate.  The stone itself grows in layers of color, the dark red and then the white.  The artist must then study the stone to determine how to make the face come to life.  This one features a woman shown in profile with her hair pulled back.  

Most cameos have been fashioned into brooches and can be quite large.  This one, however, is a perfectly sized pendant.  The small oval carving is ensconced a within multi-color gold frame, made entirely by hand.  With a pattern of rosy gold swirls, trios of small beads, and single-cut diamond accents…  this gem beats any selfie, hands down!  The number “36” is scratched onto the back of it…  perhaps indicating that it was the 36th carving of it’s kind.  It hangs from an 18 inch curb link chain and is available on our site.  Make a lasting impression of your own with this piece for just $1,400.00.

This pendant is just one piece in the rose gold edition of our Holiday Gift Guide.  Be sure to like us on Facebook and follow us on Instagram to find perfect gifts for every name on your list!  

“Go to our site and look, then come to us and touch.”

Written by Carrie Martin

Photos by Dana Jerpe

In Loving Memory

Joden Girl

Baubles, Bling and Mourning Rings

Snapchat, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter… 

Duck Face, Kissy Face, Smize, or Squnich…

Millenials are memorializing every detail of their lives, from the most mundane to the downright inappropriate – it’s all there on social media for the world to see.  I’m not averse to it…  I’ve been known to pose for a selfie or two, send out snaps and check in with my girls on Facebook – but some life events deserve more than a quick pic and a hasty status update.  Things like engagements and weddings, or perhaps when a new life begins, and certainly when a life ends. 

They were doing it right two hundred years ago.  When a loved one passed away, the bereavement process often included the creation of a special piece of jewelry; it was called mourning jewelry.  These unique treasures usually included the name of the deceased person as well as their death date.  Many also included a special compartment for a lock of hair.  These small trinkets were handed out at the funeral while more elaborate styles were worn by family members. 

These are just three of the mourning rings we have here at Joden.  Black enamel was a recurring theme in this type of jewelry (as you can see) as were pearls, urns, and flowers.  Each one of these rings is engraved (from left to right)…

  • T.T.J.  14.12.1893
  • M.H.C. Mourant died 6th Oct. 1866
  • W:  Terry OB: 24 Oct: 1809: AE 53

    

The trio of rings on the left are all very similar to each other; the hair receiver on top surrounded by natural pearls (usually signifying the loss of a child).  Only one of them actually contains hair – the other two are still waiting for someone to fill them.  The ring on the right was made in the Georgian period.  The delicate blonde tresses inside have been plaited into a basket-weave pattern completely surrounded by sparkling purple gemstones. 

    

Quite a lot of the mementos made in the 1800’s were brooches and lockets, like the ones shown here.  The two pins in the foreground are exceptional examples of the fine workmanship that mourning jewelry is known for.  The locket in the background is covered in a layer of black enamel with a pearl-centered flower on the front.  As you can see in the photo on the right, the locket appears to have never been used…  the original blue silk is still inside in pristine condition.

I readily admit that when one of my sons is doing something particularly adorable or noteworthy, the first thing I reach for is my cell phone – to capture that smile forever.  Photographs are truly worth a thousand words, and I cherish all of mine.  But I can’t help but feel that if I had a ring on my little finger (with a lock of my loved one’s hair safely cradled inside), it would be incredibly comforting to know that I carried a part of them with me every day.  I’m certain that each time I looked at the ring, I would smile.  And remember. 

Written by Carrie Martin

Photos by Shelly Isacco

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