Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 10

14 Karat Gold and Cultured Pearl Bow Brooch 1960s

About the Item

A vintage bow brooch crafted in 14 karat yellow gold. The outside surface of the bow is made of smooth gold while the inner surface is textured and matted. The brooch is set with a cultured pearl in the centre. The brooch closes with a roll-over safety catch. The brooch is in very good vintage condition. It is marked on the back and tested as 585 gold. Dimensions: Brooch: 44 mm Pearl: 6 mm Weight: 6.3 grams
  • Metal:
    Gold
  • Stone:
    Cultured Pearl
  • Stone Cut:
    Bead
  • Weight:
    6.3 g
  • Dimensions:
    Width: 1.74 in (44 mm)
  • Style:
    Retro
  • Place of Origin:
    Netherlands
  • Period:
    20th Century
  • Date of Manufacture:
    1960s
  • Condition:
    Wear consistent with age and use.
  • Seller Location:
    Arnhem, NL
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU2484221380082
More From This SellerView All
  • 18 Karat Yellow Gold Brooch Designed as an Actor Drama Mask with a Snake
    Located in Arnhem, NL
    A 18 karat yellow gold designed as an actor/drama/theater mask with a snake. The mask features a textured and hammered front surface while the back side of the mask is smooth. The br...
    Category

    Late 20th Century Dutch Contemporary Brooches

    Materials

    Yellow Gold

  • Victorian Etruscan Revival 15 Karat Yellow Gold Filigree Brooch
    Located in Arnhem, NL
    An antique Victorian English 15 karat yellow gold brooch in Etruscan Revival/ Neo Etruscan style that was characteristic from the jewelry from the Victorian Epoche in the late 19th c...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century British Victorian Brooches

    Materials

    Yellow Gold

  • Antique Victorian Dutch 14 Karat Yellow Gold Brooch/Pendant
    Located in Arnhem, NL
    An antique Victorian Dutch 14 karat yellow gold pendant/brooch made with filigree technique. The filigree technique is a very refined method that uses a thin golden thread to form a ...
    Category

    Antique Late 19th Century Dutch Victorian Brooches

    Materials

    Yellow Gold

  • 18 Karat Tricolor Gold Round Floral Brooch with Gray Pearl Mid of the 20th C
    Located in Arnhem, NL
    A vintage 18 karat tricolor (yellow, white & rose) gold brooch in a form of a round abstract flower with a gray pearl in the middle. The brooch features a precise and intricate finis...
    Category

    Vintage 1950s Dutch Retro Brooches

    Materials

    Pearl, Gold

  • 14 Karat Yellow Gold Floral Brooch with Seven Cultivated Akoya Pearls
    Located in Arnhem, NL
    A vintage 14 karat yellow gold brooch in a form of an abstract flower with seven cream-colored cultivated Akoya pearls in the middle. The brooch is of high quality and it features a...
    Category

    Vintage 1960s Dutch Retro Brooches

    Materials

    Pearl, Yellow Gold

  • Antique 14 Karat Oval Onyx Pendant with Floral Emerald Pearl & Gold Decoration
    Located in Arnhem, NL
    A Victorian antique 14 karat oval onyx pendant with a floral decoration assembled of pearls, emerald, and engraved gold leaves with petals. In the past the pendant was also used a brooch, but the pin to attach it is missing now ( please see the picture of the back side of the pendant). The pendant is dating back to the early 20th century and it is in good antique condition. Further are no flaws, just age related patina. The pendant comes with a 14 karat solid gold Venetian link necklace...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Dutch Victorian Pendant Necklaces

    Materials

    Emerald, Onyx, Pearl, Gold

You May Also Like
  • Cartier New York GIA Certified 11.24 Carat Old Mine Cushion Diamond Brooch
    By Cartier
    Located in Miami, FL
    Magnificent Cartier Art Deco Platinum and Diamond Brooch featuring a matching pair of important Old Mine Cut Diamonds weighing 5.60 carats and 5.64 carats. Both accompanied by a GIA report stating that they are H color VS1 and H color VS2 clarity. This brooch comes with an Expertise letter from IAJA (international Antique Jewelers...
    Category

    Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Brooches

    Materials

    Diamond, Platinum

  • Carved Coral Buddha Pendant in 18k Gold Set with Diamonds, Emeralds and Rubies
    Located in Honolulu, HI
    MAGNIFICENT large vintage Buddha pendant brooch in 18K yellow gold. This gorgeous pendant features a stunning Buddha carved in natural coral set...
    Category

    Late 20th Century Unknown Pendant Necklaces

    Materials

    Coral, Diamond, Emerald, Ruby, 18k Gold

  • Line Vautrin "La Manif" Gilt Bronze Brooch
    By Line Vautrin
    Located in New York, NY
    Gilt brooch by Line Vautrin (1913-1997), circa 1945-46. The design is known as ...
    Category

    Vintage 1950s French Artisan Brooches

    Materials

    Bronze, Gilt Metal, Gold Plate, Brass

  • Vintage Ruby Onyx and Diamond Classic Car Brooch
    Located in London, GB
    Here we have a superb vintage brooch. The piece has been crafted from 18ct yellow gold into the shape of a classic car from the 1930s. Automobiles of the 1930s exhibited many notable...
    Category

    Vintage 1930s Brooches

    Materials

    Diamond, Onyx, Ruby, Gold, Yellow Gold, Enamel

  • Marcus & Co. Sapphire and Diamond Bow Brooch, American, circa 1935
    Located in London, GB
    Sapphire and diamond bow brooch by Marcus & Co, American, circa 1935. A yellow gold and platinum bow form brooch set with one central row of twenty eig...
    Category

    Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Brooches

    Materials

    Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum

  • John Brogden Shell Cameo Brooch and Earrings, English, circa 1870
    By John Brogden
    Located in London, GB
    Antique shell cameo brooch and earrings by John Brogden, English, circa 1870. A yellow gold suite of jewellery, the brooch composed of a horizontally situated oval Bull’s Mouth shell cameo of the Greek goddess Selene riding a serpentine dragon in a rubover collet setting, encircled by a conforming frame of gold beading and twisted gold wire punctuated with four gold palmette form plaques engraved and decorated with dark blue enamel and placed at the cardinal points, the reverse mounted with a hinged pin and scroll clasp, the earrings each composed of a vertical oval Bull’s Mouth shell cameo engraved with a bust length portrait of Selene with crescent-set headdress, encircled by a conforming frame matching that of the brooch with the addition of a pendant decoration composed of a horizontal bar of gold beading and twisted gold wires suspending gold link chains graduated from centre and ending in conical gold elements, the reverses mounted with French wire fittings, all in a fitted red leather case, the interior marked ‘FIRST CLASS PARIS MEDAL/ 1855.1867.1851/ PARIS FIRST CLASS & LONDON PRIZE MEDALS/ JOHN BROGDON/ Goldsmith/ MANUFACTORY/ 16, Henrietta St. Covent Garden/ London’. The cameo—defined as a gem, usually either a mineral or a shell, upon which a design has been carved in relief—is believed to have originated in Hellenistic Greece, during the third century BC. These miniature sculptures, at that time confined to the medium of hardstone, are thought to have been made with the primary purpose of personal adornment. The same practice of mounting cameos in jewellery was then continued by the Ancient Romans, and they are known to have been worn by many a Roman emperor. After the fall of Rome the fashion for cameos went into a decline, until it was again revived during the Renaissance period, brought about by a keen interest in the ancient world. At this time both antique and contemporary cameos were mounted in jewellery, as well as collected as objet d’art. The art of cameo cutting was revived in Italy, where it would remain a centre for the coming centuries. Again there was a lull in interest in carved gemstones, until the Neoclassical revival of the eighteenth century, largely stimulated by the discoveries of the ancient Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum. As with the Renaissance, antique specimens were generally prized over modern cameos, and the worldliest men in Europe held them among their collections of art and antiques. That said, carving centres in Rome and Torre del Greco (near Naples) in Italy were established in response to the demand of the Grand Tourists, who travelled to Italy and Greece to become educated in the wonders of the ancient world. It was at this time that shell cameos, mostly made in Torre del Greco due to its proximity to the sea, became more popular, owing to the relative ease in carving shell over hardstone. In addition to Rome, hardstone cameos also became a specialty of Idar Oberstein, Germany, which had a long history with both the gem mining and cutting trade. In a shift away from the collector’s cases of the previous century, the nineteenth century saw a strengthening in the fashion for wearable cameos. After the Empress Josephine donned a cameo-set suite of jewellery at the coronation of Napoleon in 1804, cameo jewellery became all the rage. Napoleon played a further hand in promoting the art by establishing a gemstone carving school in Paris, inspired by his appreciation for the arts of the ancient world. By the mid-nineteenth century shell cameos, in part due to their lightness compared with hardstone cameos, were the height of fashion. Large shell cameos as well as hardstone cameos were set into contemporary mounts, often as suites of jewellery. Some of the best cameos of the nineteenth century—carved by a select group of recognized carvers—were set into revivalist mounts, corresponding to the subject matter. In Victorian England cameo jewellery was particularly prized, due in part to the fact that the Queen owned and wore a number of cameo jewels. One example which can often be seen in official portraits is the Badge of the Order of Victoria and Albert, carved by Tommaso Saulini of Rome, who also produced cameos for the maker of the present suite, John Brogden. To meet demand some carvers set themselves up in London, including William Schmidt, a German carver from Idar Oberstein, who produced cameos for top London jewellers, including Brogden, Carlo Giuliano and Child & Child. In fact, Schmidt purports to have been the first to carve cameos out of opal, which Brogden reportedly displayed in the Paris Exhibition of 1878. An extant example, now in the collection of the British Museum, was set by the Giuliano firm. Regarding subject matter, cameos throughout time have been largely figural, from bust length profile portraits to scenes with multiple full-length figures, and sometimes animals. Ancient Greek and Roman cameos often depicted mythological scenes as well as contemporary figures. During the Renaissance, mythological scenes were popular, often taken directly from ancient sculpture, as well as portraits of notable contemporary figures. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, due to the revivalist styles, both Renaissance and Classical subjects were copied and set into matching (and sometimes unmatching) revivalist mounts. From the Renaissance through the Victorian era, being able to recognize the source of the carving in a cameo was a mark of erudition, revealing in the wearer knowledge of Classical art. As mentioned, the present cameo parure...
    Category

    Antique 1870s English Victorian Brooches

    Materials

    Yellow Gold

Recently Viewed

View All