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INDIAN Royston Turquoise Pendant Necklace, BRACELET MARKED D U E

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Silver2625 of 3209Sheffield Coffee Pot Made in USAantique tea strainer and sugar bowl with spoons in box
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    Posted 12 years ago

    bbgems
    (4 items)

    HI I WAS WONDERING IS THESE ARE Royston Turquoise AND IF SO I CAN NOT FIND who makes them there marked D U E ??
    ANY BODY KNOW ABOUT THESE PIECES? LAST ONE IS THE BROACH
    AS always thank you so much

    Mystery Solved
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    Comments

    1. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      Can't understand your writing.
    2. Tlynnie1942 Tlynnie1942, 12 years ago
      The mark DUE is a Danish silver Maker's mark. It stands for lb Due's Guldvarefabrik-Aarhaus, and your piece was made sometime between 1961 and now.
    3. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      Are you kiddin? Thats not Danish, its Native American, Navajo.
      See the motifs? The stampwork? The turquoise?
    4. Tlynnie1942 Tlynnie1942, 12 years ago
      Ok, stillwater. But just remember the last time you thought I did not know what I was talking about...pipestems ring a bell lol?

      So, then whose hallmark is it? And are you also going to tell me that no one else uses silver with stampwork in it, and semi precious stones? Jewelry is made all over the world and not just by Native Americans. Their work has been copied for a very long time.
    5. bbgems, 12 years ago
      Hmmm...
      now i am more confused than ever,
      Danish?
    6. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      Well this is my field of expertise, so its my turn to be right. Everything about them says Navajo, nothing at all says Danish

      See the crescent stamp on the setting of the turquoise in the bracelet? That EXACT stamp is common on Navajo jewelry, the "twisted rope" border is also commonly native American, the carinated shank is also native, the little feathers were typical of 1970's NA jewelry, and how are people in Denmark going to get a hold of high-grade Royston turquoise from Nevada? There is just nothing at all that says Danish

      You can't just look at the hallmark (especially if its initials), you have to look at the construction and materials and style. I see you went to 925-1000, but thats the only place where this strange silversmith can be found, no examples of their work to compare anywhere.

      So lets hear your argument for these being Danish
    7. bbgems, 12 years ago
      so are these pieces of any real value?
      or the run of the mill?
    8. Stillwater Stillwater, 12 years ago
      Thats for you to figure out, appraisals aren't free unfortunately. There are resources available like Google and eBay.
    9. bbgems, 12 years ago
      oh, ok
      thank you.
    10. Tlynnie1942 Tlynnie1942, 12 years ago
      You can go to Len Woods website. Just put in a search for Len Woods and you will see it. They do five free appraisals for you and they specialize in Native American art. I have used them many times and got great results from them. Just take many detailed pictures so they can see all angles. And make sure to have the hallmark too. Maybe this can be resolved by experts. I am a collector, but not an expert in jewelry. But at least I looked for you to try and help. :)
    11. bbgems, 12 years ago
      you are so good to me :)

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