Featured Victorian (or later) Costume Bangles ?

Discussion in 'Jewelry' started by bosko69, Mar 2, 2023.

  1. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Here's a couple pieces I found yesterday at the Church Thrift-$3 each,so even a dope like me took a gamble.No marks that I can seen anywhere.Little one looks gold plated/washed-seems to have had black in the engraved/stamped areas.
    The bigger Baroque one,again unmarked is prob modern ? But flamboyantly strange enough for me to buy

    Gld1.jpg Gld3.jpg Gld2.jpg Gld4.jpg Silv0.jpg Silv1.jpg
     
  2. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    First one has a bit of an Aesthetic Period look to the engraving.
     
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  3. Ownedbybear

    Ownedbybear Well-Known Member

    My thinking too, very aesthetic. Might be period. I’d agree the white metal one is later, could be seventies.
     
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  4. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    I'm guessing the Aesthetic was enameled (but for a cheap bangle ?).70's sounds good for the later one,but i liked the over the top bigness of it.
     
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  5. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    The first one I'd agree on. Probably gold-filled. The second one I'd check inside, making sure to open the clasp so you can see all surfaces and the tongue of the clasp. I've seen something almost identical more than once, signed Whiting & Davis.
     
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  6. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Evely-Thanks for the tip-I've heard of Whiting & Davis on the Forum before.My Lady got a kick out of the Victorian one & it fit.
    PS-Anyway I could do a faux (re) enameling of the gold bauble ?
     
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  7. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Not sure. @kyratango probably could but I'd just make a hash of it. The original was baked on, probably, and black paint wouldn't work.
     
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  8. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Kyra's definitely the guru on this problem.
     
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  9. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    The price was definitely right for these. I like them both. First one was Taille d'Épargne. It does look filled. You can mimic enameling with black nail polish, wiping the surface to pull it off the upper layer. I wouldn't do it with a solid gold piece personally, but maybe with a filled.

    The silver bracelet looks imposing and very fun.
     
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  10. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    For $6 even a know-nothing like me had to go for it.Thank you so much for the nail polish trick,and for GF it's a great practice piece.
    Excellent reference on the Taille d'Epargne site-'American taille d’épargne was employed on burnished or bloomed gold to highlight engraving'.
    Was 'bloomed gold' referring to 'rose gold' or matte finish gold ?
     
  11. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    It looks sort of velvety matte I think. Rose gold has more copper.
     
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  12. Hollyblue

    Hollyblue Well-Known Member

    Bloomed gold is depletion gilding,many people use it to take the copper in sterling off a piece and leave the pure silver which does not tarnish.

     
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  13. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Thank you both for the education.
     
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  14. kyratango

    kyratango Bug jewellery addiction!

    Both are nice! Good catch;)
    Tricky to mend the taille d’epargne here with nail polish as the recesses aren’t very deep and the varnish will come out as soon as you’ll wipe it... I’d use black acrylic paint applied with a toothpick only in the resses
     
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  15. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    In your experience, is the natural gloss in the paint enough or does it need a gloss medium mixed in? I was concerned it might be a little too matte but it's small so may not be noticible?
     
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  16. kyratango

    kyratango Bug jewellery addiction!

    Too small to be noticed IMO, the medium to use needs to be rather fluid and tenacious once dry.
     
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  17. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Heat-set glass paint might be even better if you can find some. It sticks to metal too and doesn't require high heat to set it.
     
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  18. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Back in the early 60's my Mom had a hobby enameling kit.You'd take a disc of kit-supplied copper,paint designs on it's surface,and then bake it in the Kitchen oven !
    When weren't overly concerned with toxic gases in our homes back then-'Hey Johnny,will you hand me those asbestos ovens mitts sweetie-cupcakes are ready !'.
     
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  19. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    Lolll well there are enamel paints that are for metal so those might be an option too.
     
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