VERY LARGE Sterling & Faux gemstone brooch. Who Dunnit?

Discussion in 'Jewelry' started by vitry-le-francois, Jan 5, 2017.

  1. vitry-le-francois

    vitry-le-francois Well-Known Member

    brooch4.jpg brooch3.jpg brooch1.jpg brooch2.jpg I'm getting to the point where I need to STOP buying stuff that I can't figure out who dunnit. Despite that I only paid 99 cents at a thrift for this piece doesn't lessen the heartburn I get trying to figure out the when/where/why this was made. Any help would be appreciated!
     
    lauragarnet likes this.
  2. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    bottom right...is that a mark or just casting dribble ?

    by the look of the pin...which is bent and has an added stickpin type stopper...this was worn a lot ...and cherished...so...for a buck....learn to love it for what it is...even if we can't nail it down..

    or....buy some gaviscon...
     
    lauragarnet likes this.
  3. clutteredcloset49

    clutteredcloset49 Well-Known Member

    There are too many stones missing for this to have any value.
    You can take the stones out and save them to glue into other pieces missing stones, then put the sterling in your pile that needs to be scrapped.

    Or you can scrounge other jewelry or buy new stones to glue in and make the piece presentable.

    As it is now - very little value. And sorry to say, I don't think the who done it is that important.

    All the red marks represent missing stones. I probably missed some, hard to see in a photo.
    upload_2017-1-5_23-45-8.png
     
    cxgirl likes this.
  4. Bev aka thelmasstuff

    Bev aka thelmasstuff Colored pencil artist extraordinaire ;)

    If you can't live without it, message Marie Forjan. She repairs costume jewelry - at least she's done some pieces for me.
     
    clutteredcloset49 likes this.
  5. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Either that, or just remove the rest of the little stones and wear it as is. For a buck you couldn't miss. Those little guys look to be turning yellow, so they'd have to go regardless.
     
    clutteredcloset49 likes this.
  6. Calico

    Calico Well-Known Member

    This was made in the 1940's, and the stones are an easy fix, certainly worth the effort. Marie and I both repair vintage costume jewelry, it's very rewarding and such fun to bring a piece like this back to life.
     
    clutteredcloset49 and komokwa like this.
  7. vitry-le-francois

    vitry-le-francois Well-Known Member

    Thanks for all the replies. I guess it will go to the 12-years-until-retirement scrap pile :)
     
  8. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    Or it could go into the "learning jewelry repair" pile. :)

    For some reason I like pieces of jewelry that are missing some stones. I know they are not worth much, but that is okay with me.
     
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