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Art Blackburn
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Home
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NATIVE AMERICAN
Historic Pottery
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Bracelets
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Nayarit
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Belts / Buckles Important Second Phase Concho Belt
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Important Second Phase Concho Belt

$6,500.00

Navajo

Ingot silver with turquoise

Circa 1900

Belt Length 37"

7 conchos 3" x 3 1/2"

Buckle 2 1/4" x 3"

733.17 grams

Provenance: Robert Nooter, Washington, DC

Outstanding example of a early Second Phase concho belt. Circa early 1900's on original leather. The use of Ingot silver is very common of this type of belt and its time period. 

Ingot Silver An ingot is a simply a bar or block of metal. The blocks can be any shape but are traditionally rectangles. The metals most commonly used in Native American jewelry are sterling silver or coin silver.... To make an ingot, the chosen metal is melted, then poured into block forms.From this the silver is hammered and shaped into the concho's you see above.

Concho Belt The word concho, sometimes spelled concha, comes from the Spanish word meaning shell. Some of the first "conchos" were made of melted silver dollars and resembled a shell—it is commonly thought this is how the name came about. In Spanish, the correct word is concha, with an a at the end and is pronounced like an ah sound. However, most people now-a-days refer to the Native American style belt as a concho belt, with an o. Although it is commonly said the Navajo (Dine’) borrowed the idea from Spaniards.  Concho Belts reportedly began appearing in Navajo country in the late 1860s or early 1870s. The Navajo (Dine') learned how to work silver in the mid-nineteenth century. They had long appreciated silver jewelry that they acquired from Southwestern Hispanics and Plains tribes, but it is generally believed that they did not learn how to make metal jewelry until circa 1850 when Atsidi Sani became friends with a Mexican smith named Nakai Tsosi. Tsosi taught him how to work iron so that he could make bridles that he could sell to other Navajo. After the end of the Navajos' internment at Bosque Redondo near Fort Sumner in 1868, Nakai Tsosi taught Atsidi Sani how to smith silver for jewelry. He, in turn, taught his sons and other Navajos. Second Phase In the 1880’s the second phase of concho belt development, the silversmith had begun to solder. He now soldered a silver, or later a copper, strap or bar across the back of a concho to run the leather belt through (more often silver in those early years). This allowed for the entire face of the concho to be decorated and kept the leather belt on the backside of the concho. The second phase is generally thought of as being during the years of the 1890s through early 1900s.

INQUIRE HERE

Purchase

Navajo

Ingot silver with turquoise

Circa 1900

Belt Length 37"

7 conchos 3" x 3 1/2"

Buckle 2 1/4" x 3"

733.17 grams

Provenance: Robert Nooter, Washington, DC

Outstanding example of a early Second Phase concho belt. Circa early 1900's on original leather. The use of Ingot silver is very common of this type of belt and its time period. 

Ingot Silver An ingot is a simply a bar or block of metal. The blocks can be any shape but are traditionally rectangles. The metals most commonly used in Native American jewelry are sterling silver or coin silver.... To make an ingot, the chosen metal is melted, then poured into block forms.From this the silver is hammered and shaped into the concho's you see above.

Concho Belt The word concho, sometimes spelled concha, comes from the Spanish word meaning shell. Some of the first "conchos" were made of melted silver dollars and resembled a shell—it is commonly thought this is how the name came about. In Spanish, the correct word is concha, with an a at the end and is pronounced like an ah sound. However, most people now-a-days refer to the Native American style belt as a concho belt, with an o. Although it is commonly said the Navajo (Dine’) borrowed the idea from Spaniards.  Concho Belts reportedly began appearing in Navajo country in the late 1860s or early 1870s. The Navajo (Dine') learned how to work silver in the mid-nineteenth century. They had long appreciated silver jewelry that they acquired from Southwestern Hispanics and Plains tribes, but it is generally believed that they did not learn how to make metal jewelry until circa 1850 when Atsidi Sani became friends with a Mexican smith named Nakai Tsosi. Tsosi taught him how to work iron so that he could make bridles that he could sell to other Navajo. After the end of the Navajos' internment at Bosque Redondo near Fort Sumner in 1868, Nakai Tsosi taught Atsidi Sani how to smith silver for jewelry. He, in turn, taught his sons and other Navajos. Second Phase In the 1880’s the second phase of concho belt development, the silversmith had begun to solder. He now soldered a silver, or later a copper, strap or bar across the back of a concho to run the leather belt through (more often silver in those early years). This allowed for the entire face of the concho to be decorated and kept the leather belt on the backside of the concho. The second phase is generally thought of as being during the years of the 1890s through early 1900s.

INQUIRE HERE

Navajo

Ingot silver with turquoise

Circa 1900

Belt Length 37"

7 conchos 3" x 3 1/2"

Buckle 2 1/4" x 3"

733.17 grams

Provenance: Robert Nooter, Washington, DC

Outstanding example of a early Second Phase concho belt. Circa early 1900's on original leather. The use of Ingot silver is very common of this type of belt and its time period. 

Ingot Silver An ingot is a simply a bar or block of metal. The blocks can be any shape but are traditionally rectangles. The metals most commonly used in Native American jewelry are sterling silver or coin silver.... To make an ingot, the chosen metal is melted, then poured into block forms.From this the silver is hammered and shaped into the concho's you see above.

Concho Belt The word concho, sometimes spelled concha, comes from the Spanish word meaning shell. Some of the first "conchos" were made of melted silver dollars and resembled a shell—it is commonly thought this is how the name came about. In Spanish, the correct word is concha, with an a at the end and is pronounced like an ah sound. However, most people now-a-days refer to the Native American style belt as a concho belt, with an o. Although it is commonly said the Navajo (Dine’) borrowed the idea from Spaniards.  Concho Belts reportedly began appearing in Navajo country in the late 1860s or early 1870s. The Navajo (Dine') learned how to work silver in the mid-nineteenth century. They had long appreciated silver jewelry that they acquired from Southwestern Hispanics and Plains tribes, but it is generally believed that they did not learn how to make metal jewelry until circa 1850 when Atsidi Sani became friends with a Mexican smith named Nakai Tsosi. Tsosi taught him how to work iron so that he could make bridles that he could sell to other Navajo. After the end of the Navajos' internment at Bosque Redondo near Fort Sumner in 1868, Nakai Tsosi taught Atsidi Sani how to smith silver for jewelry. He, in turn, taught his sons and other Navajos. Second Phase In the 1880’s the second phase of concho belt development, the silversmith had begun to solder. He now soldered a silver, or later a copper, strap or bar across the back of a concho to run the leather belt through (more often silver in those early years). This allowed for the entire face of the concho to be decorated and kept the leather belt on the backside of the concho. The second phase is generally thought of as being during the years of the 1890s through early 1900s.

INQUIRE HERE

120 EAST EL PASO, P.O. BOX 485, MARFA, TEXAS 79843

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