Featured Sterling coin bracelet, what is the significance of the centre panel?

Discussion in 'Jewelry' started by Elen Beattie, Feb 9, 2024.

  1. Elen Beattie

    Elen Beattie Well-Known Member

    Hi everyone, happy Friday! This sterling bracelet looks like 3 pence coins but they are domed (are they actual coins?) The dates range from 1885-1919. Any idea what the central "8" panel signifies? Thanks for any info!
    405308563_241547435680578_8898654687505931216_n.jpg 417321470_408281475028165_2212044856198259972_n.jpg 405086345_1380630719242737_8415451231043106942_n.jpg 421501545_781539087213788_5578945174917755178_n.jpg 405164007_403808145347255_8173302359156212330_n.jpg 405333678_353958574223683_5015184362534315811_n.jpg 405085051_407295835011047_2820076277222915996_n.jpg
     
  2. terry5732

    terry5732 Well-Known Member

    eighth air force?
     
  3. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    The Threepence coins are all real and all Sterling silver.
    Someone has shaped them that way.
    What does the hallmark say on the reverse of the centre piece ?
     
  4. Elen Beattie

    Elen Beattie Well-Known Member

    Thank you! It says Sterling silver.
     
    daveydempsey likes this.
  5. JewelryPicker

    JewelryPicker Well-Known Member

    Agreed
     
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  6. Bronwen

    Bronwen Well-Known Member

    A sweetheart gift, cobbled together by hand. Very cool.
     
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  7. Elen Beattie

    Elen Beattie Well-Known Member

    Thanks everyone! So it was likely a WW2 sweetheart piece then? I wonder why the coins are all older than the time period?
     
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  8. J Dagger

    J Dagger Well-Known Member

    They were probably still circulating at that time. Also English coinage was reduced from the sterling standard (.925) to .500 silver in 1920. Sterling was nicer looking and people liked higher purity silver obviously. Also I think there was just a trend to use older coins because they were cool and nice to look at. It could also have been frowned upon by the government to deface new coinage and looked down on less to do so to old coins.
     
    komokwa, Elen Beattie and Bronwen like this.
  9. J Dagger

    J Dagger Well-Known Member

    Nice bracelet btw! Also be careful out there. While yours are real it seems, there are some domed coins out there that aren’t. A common example is the Stone Mountain (confederate civil war monument) commemorative half dollar conchos. They made them like crazy and some look convincing to a coin novice. I bought one in an antique shop years ago. Not sure why this is the one coin they chose to make them out of other than the general CW interest.

    Turns out not everything in antique stores is antique or authentic. A lesson many noobs probably learn the hard way. F3AEF52B-3195-4B1A-9405-FCADBED6FD69.jpeg 6BE3BEB1-1D34-4D34-B7DF-73810B6C6AEC.jpeg
     
  10. Elen Beattie

    Elen Beattie Well-Known Member

    Good advice thank you!
     
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  11. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Ditto Terry-8th Airforce eight w/ a 2nd Infantry Div star w/ an Indian chief in it (or not)-odd combo ?
     
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  12. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    It does look a bit odd, but if this was made by an amateur or made for one guy for his girl you never can tell. The maker did what he was asked.
     
    Bronwen likes this.
  13. Elen Beattie

    Elen Beattie Well-Known Member

    Goodness, I never even noticed that that was an Indian chief head!
     
    Last edited: Feb 9, 2024
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  14. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    8th Infantry Division.

    300px-8th_Infantry_Division_patch.svg.png

    2nd Infantry Division

    2nd_Infantry_Division_(US)_SSI.png
     
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  15. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    Just the 8th Air Force logo.

    8thlogo.jpg
     
  16. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    I don't know if @Elen Beattie has more info, or wants more, but The Mighty Eighth Museum has a very vast and serious Research Center with a library, art, documents, etc. relating to the 8th. They can be contacted, or if you're particularly motivated, you can visit.
     
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  17. Matahari

    Matahari Well-Known Member

    Domed coins are one thing ( silver threepenny coins were easy to find, still are )

    The 8th air force were in england in 1942 and a medal would be harder to find ...

    I think it's what we call "sweetheart bracelet "
     
    Last edited: Feb 10, 2024
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  18. Matahari

    Matahari Well-Known Member

  19. Ownedbybear

    Ownedbybear Well-Known Member

    It’s very common for silver three penny pieces to be domed like that for jewellery here. I’ve several similar. Some hallmarked too, so it’s not always amateur work.

    as to defacing the older coins were still legal tender, so rules were the same.
     
  20. Elen Beattie

    Elen Beattie Well-Known Member

    Thanks again for all of the helpful information everyone, I can always rely on you to be a wealth of knowledge :)
     
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