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Navajo Silversmith History

When and how the Navajo acquired the art of working metals
is unknown but there are reasons for supposing that it was introduced
among them, or at least more developed and improved upon by them, since
the time they have occupied their present country. According to the sayings
of some of the old silversmiths of the tribe, the art of working silver
was introduced among them by the Mexicans about sixty years ago, or about
the middle of the nineteenth century, when a Navaho blacksmith, known
by his own people as atsidi sani, or the old smith, and by the Mexicans
as Herrero, or the smith, first learned the art from a Mexican silversmith
named Cassilio, who is said to have still been living in 1872-1873. An
old silversmith, beshlagai il'ini altsosigi, or the slender silversmith,
who is still living (1909), and who at one time was considered one of
the best, if not the best silversmith in the tribe, is said to have originally
learned his craft from Mexicans.
The Navaho silversmith, there for, is a comparatively modern product.
Lieut. James H Simpson, who accompanied an expedition into the heart of
the Navaho country in 1849, and who gives in his report good descriptions
of the country and people as they then were, mentions their peach orchards,
farms, herds of ponies, flocks of sheep their beautiful waterproof blankets.
etc., but has nothing to say about their artistic silverwork. The art
then, as it exists today, probably developed since then, or within the
last sixty years. Pg. 271
The Navaho do not mine. Brass for buttons was obtained
from the Utes, and copper for bracelets and ornaments from the Mexicans
and traders. Silver has superseded copper long since, and is purchased
in Mexican coin from the traders. Pg. 64
An Ethnologic Dictionary of the Navajo Language; 1910,
The Franciscan Fathers.
For a time, the ever-ingenious Navajos found a way to secure additional
supplies. Cardboard ration tickets, which were used to obtain food supplies,
were distributed among the Navajos as they passed through a gate into
a corral. They quickly learned to forge the tickets and, when the government
substituted stamped metal ration tickets, those were also forged. A few
Navajos had learned to work metal prior to their arrival at Bosque Redondo
and others apparently learned while there. These men were undoubtedly
responsible for at least some of the forgeries. It was reported that at
one time as many as three thousand extra tickets were being passed around.
The army finally sent to Washington for elaborate metal disks that could
not be copied.
In The Navajo, Ruth Underhill suggests, "When we look for the origin
of silverwork, perhaps this craft [the forgeries], developed under stress
of hunger, may point to an early inspiration." Prior to the coming
of the Spaniards, the Native Americans of the Southwest had no metal or
livestock. The Navajos were undoubtedly envious of the strange new enemies
who rode horses and had guns, bridle bits, tools, even silver-decorated
bridles and saddles. And, even though many of these items were procured
through raids, the Dine' must have wished for a steady and reliable source.
Learning metalsmithing, however, would have required tools and materials
the Navajos did not have, and the Spaniards were sworn enemies. Contact
was far too brief to allow even the quick-learning Dine' to acquire Spanish
skills. At what time the Navajos actually learned to work metal is debatable.
Some say it happened before the Long Walk, while others differ, but it
is generally accepted that one of the first blacksmiths was Atsidi Sani
(Old Smith), or Herrera Delgadito (Little Slim Ironworker), as he was
known by the Mexicans. Margery Bedinger states in Indian Silver that "In
about 1850 [Atsidi Sani] journeyed south to a Mexican settlement near
Mount Taylor... and persuaded one of the inhabitants, Nakai Tsosi (Thin
Mexican), to teach him how to form the black metal."
If not the first Navajo blacksmith, Atsidi Sani was the most prominent,
and probably the most proficient, of that era. Noted for making knives
and bridle bits, he would teach his craft to many Navajos, including some
of the men at Bosque Redondo. Most of the early metalwork was utilitarian,
but buttons, rings, earrings, belt pieces strung on leather, and a few
bridle ornaments were also made. Multiple bracelets of twisted metal were
often worn on one arm; others, hammered out of copper or brass, had lightly
scratched, simple designs. Navajos had worn silver ornaments and sported
silver bridle decoration for at least fifty years, but those articles
were of Spanish origin, either traded or stolen from Mexicans, or taken
as spoils of war from Utes or Comanches. In 1853 (eleven years prior to
incarceration at Bosque Redondo), Indian Agent Henry Dodge moved into
a newly built stone house near Fort Defiance, made friends with the Navajos,
and eventually married a Navajo woman. It is also reported that he brought
along a blacksmith and a Mexican silversmith. Many years later, the agent's
aged son, Chee Dodge, would say that "Old Smith [Atsidi Sani] came
to the agency to look on and learned some things." The supposition
is that Atsidi Sani learned or perhaps improved his skills by watching
these men, but whether his skills included silverwork is unknown. Those
years were particularly chaotic; raiding and clashes with other tribes
were at their height. Therefore, the times were not particularly conducive
to learning a new craft, and silver would have been difficult to obtain.
Atsidi Sani's great-nephew, Grey Moustache, is quoted as saying, "It
was not until the Navajo came back [from Bosque Redondo] that he [Atsidi
Sari] learned to make silver jewelry." And Chee Dodge would add that
"The Navajo didn't make any silver of their own while they were at
Fort Sumner. How could they? They were locked up there like sheep in a
corral. They had only a very little silver in those days, which they bought
from the Mexicans." Several newspaper articles published in New Mexico
during those years made claims of Navajo silverwork. "Navajos at
Fort Sumner are skilled enough to make good bridle bits and other articles
of horse equipage in iron and silver," one reported. "Amongst
the chiefs now on this reservation, many are dressed in comfortable and
even elegant style, in black cloth and buckskin, well-fitted to their
bodies and ornamented with silver buttons of their own execution and design."
The silver buttons were most assuredly not of Navajo design; they had
been procured from Mexicans for years. Furthermore, this entire account
seems doubtful considering the deplorable state of Navajo life during
exile. One might suspect that the editors, possibly influenced by corrupt
politicians who were noted for their greed-and-graft mentality, were trying
to make living conditions appear much better than they were. Historic
photographs show the Bosque Redondo Navajos poorly dressed in cotton clothing
or wrapped in blankets against the bitter cold. It is unlikely that even
"the chiefs" mentioned in the newspaper article would have dressed
as described. If any did, they must have been the exception, and any silver
ornaments they possessed were probably trade goods. It seems much more
probable that the Navajos learned to work silver soon after they resettled
in their homeland. Atsidi Sari is generally considered the founder of
the silver craft, but whether he learned it from the same Mexican who
taught him metalwork or from another Mexican friend is unconfirmed. However,
his first students were his four sons who, in turn, taught others.
With peaceful conditions, Mexican smiths began traveling onto the reservation
to trade their silver for Navajo livestock. As the silversmith fashioned
a piece, the Navajo who ordered it would certainly have observed and perhaps
even assisted by working the bellows. Considering their propensity for
acquiring new skills easily, the Navajos must have recognized this as
an excellent opportunity to learn to craft their own silver ornaments.
It has been recorded that they were casting jewelry as early as 1870.
Silver coins, acquired from soldiers at Fort Defiance and Fort Wingate,
were melted down, then poured into hand-carved molds to create a particular
design or a simple ingot, which was then cooled, hammered into a thin
sheet of silver, and trimmed to the proper shape. The learning process,
however, was still gaining momentum. In 1884 John Lorenzo Hubbell (the
much-admired Don Lorenzo of Hubbell Trading Post at Ganado) and his partner,
C. N. Cotton, hired Mexican smiths to teach silversmithing to the Navajos,
and began furnishing some of the coins used to fashion the silver ornaments.
The first Navajo silverwork was rather crude and quite heavy, but it showed
a lot of promise. Designs were symmetrical even though smiths had no precision
implements; in fact, they had few tools of any kind, often just a hammer,
some files, and scissors or metal snips.
Washington Matthews, a young army surgeon from Fort Wingate and the most
noted Navajo authority of the 1880s, recorded the tools and techniques
used by Navajo smiths. For anvils they acquired pieces of train rail,
kingpins from wagons, any old pieces of iron large enough, hard stones,
or tree stumps. Forges were made of mud or sandstone, the bellows from
goatskin bags, and crucibles from anything that worked stones with small
hollows, tumbler-sized pottery pieces made especially for that purpose,
or iron pipes with one end flattened, turned up, and sealed. A semicircle
or V-shaped groove was sometimes cut into anvils for shaping bracelets;
the first molds were made from baked clay and discarded after a time.
Later molds were carved from iron, wood, or soft sandstone, which was
greased with mutton tallow to prevent sticking. Some of the first silver
items made by Navajo smiths were the buttons they had previously obtained
from Mexicans. Men's trousers, jackets, leather pouches, bridles, saddles,
gun scabbards, ketohs, or bow guards, the wide leather bands worn on the
left wrist to protect from the bowstring's recoil. and belts were adorned
with these silver ornaments. They also decorated the moccasins and leggings
of both sexes, and women's blouses had rows of them at the neck, across
the shoulder, down the front, and running the length of both sleeves.
Many bracelets were nothing more than narrow bands with notches cut on
either side; others were made of twisted wire or plain silver with simple
designs scratched in with a file. Conchas for belts were decorated with
scalloped edges, punched holes, and incised and stamped designs. Rings
were simple decorated hands of silver; earrings were large loops that
passed through pierced ears. Silver replaced the tin decorations on ketohs.
Small silver canteen-shaped containers for carrying tobacco were copied
from rawhide ones carried by Mexicans. The headbands of bridles were covered
with wide strips of silver that almost concealed the leather. Normally,
a silver concha was added on either side, and a crescent-shaped ornament
called a naja hung from the forehead strap. Najas, adapted from those
used by the Spaniards, were worn on bead necklaces as well, and were often
interchangeable with those on bridles. Matthews also recorded the bead-making
process which began around 1870. By this time, the smiths were apparently
turning from U.S. coins to pesos for their silver; Matthews mentions that
Mexican silver dollars were used to form the beads. A peso was pounded
into the desired thickness; then a disk large enough to make half a bead
was cut out with scissors. It was trimmed and used as a pattern for the
others. Half-circles were formed with a mold and die; the pieces were
strung on a stout wire in pairs forming full circles and fastened tightly
together. A mixture of borax, saliva, and silver was applied to the seams
of all the beads; they were put into the fire and all soldered at one
time. After cooling, the beads were blanched, filed, and polished.
Bead necklaces had become very popular by the 1900s. According to G. W.
James in Indians of the Painted Desert Region, "scarcely a man or
woman of any standing in the tribe does not possess a home-manufactured
necklace of silver beads." The "squash blossom" necklace
was probably introduced around the turn of the century. It was not mentioned
by Matthews in the 1880s, but was included in the Franciscan Father's
Ethnologic Dictionary of 1910: "When arranged upon a string or thong,
each necklace contains from fifty to sixty the finer, smaller specimens
often number as many as one hundred beads. Usually they have a large crescent-shaped
pendant in the front center, and in the lower half of the strand small
silver crosses, and other flowerlike ornaments are strung after every
second or third bead. Necklaces of this kind are very much prized by the
Navajo and are certainly very ornamental." The most accepted theory
about the squash blossom design is that it symbolizes the Mexican pomegranate.
In A Brief History of Navajo Silversmithing, Arthur Woodward wrote: "It
is my contention that all of these beads were originally Spanish-American
trouser and jacket ornaments. . . . [The pomegranate] has been a favorite
Spanish decorative motif for centuries . . . it seems foolish to look
farther afield for prototypes of this highly popular necklace element.
If one were to remove these buttons or cape ornaments from the original
garments and string them, the result would be a fine 'old' Navajo necklace."
The ornament was quite possibly misnamed by a trader who thought it resembled
a squash blossom.
The first decorations on silver were merely scratched in with a file.
Later, a stronger tool was used to cut deeper lines. The technique of
"punching" silver was adapted from the Mexican tooling of leather.
Any sharp-pointed piece of iron was used as a tool to punch dots into
the silver. The first stamps were made by cutting a piece of pipe in half
to make the imprint of a semicircle. Don Lorenzo brought steel dies, or
stamps, to Hubbell Trading Post later, but many smiths still made their
own. The years from 1880 to 1900 have been called the Classic Period in
Navajo jewelry. The time of learning was over, but the tourists had not
yet entered the scene. There were numerous smiths on the reservation,
each making the items he wished to his own satisfaction. They used curved
figures and lines in their designs, and most used carved dies which they
made themselves. Many new, and much-improved, tools were available, such
as tongs, pliers, cold chisels, punches, awls, vices, and dies. Since
the use of U.S. coins had been declared illegal and the Mexicans had stopped
exportation of pesos, most of the smiths fashioned their silver ornaments
from one-ounce squares of coin silver.
Silver jewelry had become a status symbol among the Navajos, the mark
of wealth and prestige. The "pawn system" allowed them to pawn
their jewelry to traders in exchange for food and other necessities. The
jewelry was redeemed when the owner had the money, usually from selling
a rug or the wool from newly sheared sheep. In the meantime, traders often
allowed the owner to borrow the jewelry for a ceremony or a fair, then
return it the next day. Southwestern tribes had used shell and turquoise
beads in necklaces and earrings for centuries, and the early Navajos wore
these ornaments as well as turquoise nugget earrings. The nugget necklaces
so popular among the Navajos probably evolved through the years. As turquoise
became more available, it gradually replaced much of the shell. Adding
turquoise to silverwork was not a common practice until around 1900. Even
then, one large stone was usually set into each classically simple piece.
Other stones, used to a lesser extent, included garnet, peridot, opal,
coral, smoky topaz, jasper, carnelian, chalcedony, agate, malachite, and
jet, to name a few. None ever enjoyed the popularity of turquoise. In
the early 1900s, the winds of change blew in with the coming of the railroad
and the Fred Harvey Company, which established accommodations along the
route. Tourism was introduced to Indian country, and tourists wanted silver
jewelry. However, most of them neither knew nor cared anything about quality;
they wanted inexpensive pieces adorned with garish designs, and shopkeepers
were all too willing to please. Items made strictly for tourists began
appearing: ashtrays, watch bracelets, letter openers, cigarette holders,
and utensils.
Larger companies began mass-producing "Indian" jewelry; smaller
shops hired both non-Indians and Indians from various tribes to machine-stamp
cheap, tinny silver with designs such as lightning, clouds, arrows, Indian
heads, snakes, owls, swastikas, and thunderbirds, the last merely a figment
of someone's imagination. Lists of what these figures supposedly symbolized
were given to tourists. At that time, designs on authentic, handcrafted
Indian jewelry were simply decorative. To quote Carl Rosnek in Skystone
and Silver: "A great deal of nonsense was written or rumored concerning
the 'meaning' of these symbols-when in fact, with few exceptions, they
had none for the Indians." Much of the tourist jewelry was made of
nickel and decorated with small imitation-turquoise stones. Many of these
items, sometimes referred to as "Route 66" jewelry because of
the proliferation of shops selling it along that highway, were stamped
"nickel silver." By 1937, laws were passed stating that only
Indian-made jewelry could be labeled as such, but circumvention became
a favorite pastime. In 1940, the Japanese even went so far as to name
a town "Reservation," so they could "legitimately"
stamp Reservation Made onto manufactured jewelry.
In an effort to slow down the mass production of cheap imitation Indian
jewelry made in sweatshops (as they were commonly called), the government
ordered that only handmade jewelry could be sold at National Parks and
Monuments, and some schools began teaching silversmithing. However, these
were troubled times and, with war looming on the horizon, the government
had other concerns. In 1941 it did form the Navajo Arts and Crafts Guild
to emphasize quality work and encourage the casting of silver; consequently,
the skills of many artists improved. The project had to be dropped during
World War II, but the Navajo Tribe was allowed to take it over. Despite
the problems facing the world and the degradation of their craft during
the early 1900s, there were many smiths who never lessened their standards.
Superb craftsmen continued to set high-grade stones in quality silver,
and some excellent jewelry of that period is considered classic. The use
of turquoise had increased through the years, and a few jewelers began
adopting the Zuni style of setting multiple stones close together in silver.
A larger piece of turquoise was surrounded by small stones, thus forming
a cluster. This "cluster style" was a change for Navajo silversmiths,
but the Navajos have always accepted change-when it benefited them. Experimenting
with new techniques and styles was a change they welcomed. Pgs. 9-28
Navajo Jewelry, A legacy of Silver and Stone; 1995, Lois
Essary Jacka: Jerry Jacka.
The famous Navajo silverwork began in these hard years of reconstruction.
It was a move made on the Indians' own initiative and, at first, without
help from school or agent. For fifty years or so the Navajos had been
wearing silver jewelry and bridle ornaments stolen or traded in Mexico.
Why should they bother to make such things themselves? They were too busy
with war and sheep raising. However, one medicine man called Etsidi Sani,
or Old Smith, had at least been interested in ironwork. He had got a "Mexican"
friend, which means New Mexican, to teach him how to make iron ornaments
for bridles. Some have said he made silver as well as iron, but Old Smith's
descendants are sure that the Navajos knew nothing about silverwork before
going to Fort Sumner. At the fort, Old Smith had no chance to practice
his art-unless, indeed, it was he who counterfeited those identification
tags. "How could the Navajo work silver at Fort Sumner!" exclaimed
their late chairman Chee Dodge. "They were locked up there just like
sheep in a corral!" But when they returned to a poverty-stricken
land, that was a different matter. Old Smith went back to his Mexican
friend and, say his descendants, learned how to forge and hammer silver.
He taught his four sons, using a forge made of baked mud, a bellows of
goat skin, and tools out of any pieces of scrap iron begged or filched
from the whites. Eagerly the Navajos seized this new means of trade and
livelihood. The Zunis still tell how Ugly Smith, one of Old Smith's sons,
came to their village in 1872. He came as a poor man, with nothing but
his tools and the horse he rode. He stayed a year, teaching the Zunis
to make bridle ornaments, belts, and bow guards. When he left, he was
driving a herd of horses and sheep ahead of him. That was a bit later
in Navajo history. Pgs. 157-158
The Navajos; 1956, Ruth M. Underhill.
Silversmithing was learned even more recently. Woodward's data show that
the Navahos started to work silver at some time between 1853 and 1858.
Techniques were probably learned from whites, either directly from Mexicans
or indirectly through other Indian tribes. Much about metal-working may
have been learned from the smiths at Fort Sumner during the captivity
in the sixties. Of design, Woodward says:
The ancestry of Navaho silver ornament forms has its roots
in the silver trade jewelry distributed to the tribes east of the Mississippi
River after 1750, and in the Mexican-Spanish costume ornaments and bridle
trappings of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
The silver distributed to eastern Indians goes back to
the traditions of the great English smiths. Thus modern Navaho silver
blends English and colonial traditions with Spanish and (ultimately) Arabic.
This explains why the solid, simple pieces in the classical Navaho tradition
often remind connoisseurs of antique English silver. Pgs. 26-27
The Navaho; 1946, Clyde Kluckhohn and Dorothea Leighton.
Navajo silverwork has also been the subject of substantial scholarly research.
Readers interested in the various forms and stylistic changes of Navajo
jewelry are referred to the excellent studies by Margery Bedinger (1973),
John Adair (1944), and Arthur Woodward (1971). Our present study is concerned
with the economic implications of and technological changes in Navajo
silversmithing. The Navajos were wearing silver jewelry obtained from
the Spaniards by the late eighteenth century, and learned silversmithing
from them in about the mid-nineteenth century. Although many scholars
have contended that the Navajos did not begin working in silver until
after Bosque Redondo it seems likely that they were learning the rudiments
of the trade in the previous decade. However, the evolution of silversmithing
as an economically important craft did not take place until after 1868.
In 1869, Edward Palmer, who led several expeditions from the Peabody Museum
to the Southwest during the 1870s, wrote that the Navajos were making
silver buttons from Spanish and Mexican one real coins. According to Palmer,
the buttons were used as money. A one real coin was worth 12 1/2 or eight
to the dollar, and the buttons had the same value. Lack of proper tools
limited the quality and variety of items produced by early Navajo silversmiths.
In 1871 the agency requested and presumably issued a small number of anvils,
vises, hammers, files, file saws, and bellows to help Navajo blacksmiths,
who usually worked as silversmiths as well.
During the 1870s, the quality of Navajo silverwork improved as smiths
acquired a wider variety of tools from traders and learned to make tools
themselves. Matthews noted in the early 1880s that Navajo smiths purchased
scissors, iron pliers, hammers, awls, emery paper, fine files, and borax
for soldering from local traders. They had also learned to make goatskin
bellows, anvils, dies and bolts, sandstone molds for casting, tongs, and
brass blowpipes.
As their equipment improved, the silversmiths could produce a greater
variety of items. By the early 1800s, they were making buttons, rosettes,
bracelets, bridle ornaments, and concha belts. Three or four of the smiths
were fashioning canteen-shaped tobacco cases. About 1880, some of the
smiths in the Ganado area started to make jewelry with turquoise sets.
Silversmithing flourished during the 1880s, when the Navajos prospered
and began investing their wealth in silver jewelry. In 1880, when Navajo
employees of the agency were asking for their pay in Mexican coins Manuelito
decided to make bridles out of silver money. Navajo silversmiths were
finding a ready market for their work among their own tribesmen, and a
profitable trade in silver jewelry was evolving with local whites and
members of other tribes.
The development of the pawn system during the 1880s further encouraged
silversmithing. Silver ornaments, no matter what kind, could be pawned
to traders in exchange for other goods. The pawn system expanded the function
of silver jewelry from personal adornment to "savings" which
could be used during times of economic crisis. Bedinger thought that silversmithing
probably started in the Ganado area, and noted that most of the "pioneer"
Navajo silversmiths lived within twenty-five to forty miles of Ganado.
The number of smiths rapidly increased during this period, and by 1900
silversmiths lived throughout Navajo country Nevertheless, in terms of
technique, design, and skill, the Ganado smiths continued to excel.
A History of the Navajos, The Reservation Years; 1986,
Garrick Bailey and Roberta Glenn Bailey.
The masculine counterpart of the squaw's art of rug weaving is silversmithing.
In recent years, however, the women have been taking up silversmithing,
and it is estimated that today there are nearly a hundred women silversmiths
on the reservation. Since there are no silver mines on the reservation,
the Navajo had to obtain his metal from outside. He used to melt down
dollars, but he is now able to buy from the traders squares of silver
known locally as "slugs." The Navajo silversmith is a true artist
who will work incessantly for many hours and even without food until he
has finished his piece of jewelry. Though he borrowed the craft from the
Spaniards only about eighty years ago, he has developed it to a high degree
of perfection, despite a lack of proper tools. His rings, belt buckles,
bracelets, and necklaces, frequently set with native turquoise and adorned
with die-work, are worn by both Navajo men and women. They are also treasured
by the white people of our country and visitors from abroad. Navajo bracelets
have no clasps. Each bracelet has a small gap through which one's wrist
slips. If the gap is too big, the ends can be pressed together after the
bracelet is on. An expert can slip over his wrist a bracelet even with
a very small gap by pressing one end into the depression between the two
forearm bones about two inches above the wrist joint.
At one time, only the Navajo men wore silver earrings. The women had to
be satisfied with a loop of turquoise beads. The men's earrings were so
tremendous that when they rode a horse they had to tie them to the back
of their necks to avoid excruciating pain. Most of the silver ornaments
sold in stores or to tourists are made by Navajo men who practice their
craft in the railroad towns or their vicinity. The Navajo of the interior
works with silver for his own pleasure. He does not have the tools of
his commercialized urban brother - the anvil, blow torch, solder, compass,
steel stamps, vise, nipper, pliers. For an anvil, he used a hard stone
or a piece of iron from a plow or wagon. Instead of a blow torch, he has
mud and sandstone forge with a hole in its bowl shaped bottom through
which air is pumped from a goatskin bellows to keep the fire smoldering.
His smelting fuel is charcoal made from juniper logs. His crucible in
which he melts his silver is made of poor clay that is porous and brittle.
He greases his sandstone molds before he pours his molten silver into
them. To solder, he directs the flame from a wick through a piece of tubing
to the desired point on his fine piece of silver. His solder consists
of borax, saliva, and silverdust. When he has finished his work of art,
which by now is tarnished from flame and handling, he dips it into a concoction
of "rocksalt" in boiling water. He does this before ornamenting
it with turquoise, so that he will not damage the precious stone.
Despite the simplicity and crudeness of his equipment, the Navajo silversmith
of the interior is able to produce round hollow silver beads and many
other ornaments of unsurpassed quality. His hollow beads are made by soldering
together two semispherical pieces of silver which have been hammered on
hard wood marked with indentations of various sizes and designs. The solid
or raindrop bead is made without the use of a mold. He blows air through
a piece of tubing on a bit of melted silver to give it the shape of a
raindrop. A more recent method is to take a small snip of silver and heat
it over a small indentation in charred wood, or on the so-called sandstone,
which actually is pumaceous tuff. The snip of silver turns into a small
ball. By this technique dozens of balls may be made at the same time.
His engraving on a flat silver ornament is done with the aid of sharply
pointed knives, wires, and chisels. The commercial jewelry has a lot of
punched or stamped silver in it, but the Navajo prefers for himself the
simpler designs.
It is really astonishing what a stolid, uninspired-looking Navajo can
do with a few simple tools. My wife wanted a silver compact made for her
like the one she already had a machine-made object, the product of precision
tools. To our amazement though it took him a whole day because of the
primitive nature of his tools before our eyes he reproduced the whole
thing in every detail, including the old-style trunk hinges, by melting
chunks of crude silver and pounding it into the desired shapes. In addition
he decorated it with Navajo designs and turquoise. The compact is a piece
of art far superior in value and beauty to the original from which it
was copied.
The white purchasers expect all sorts of symbolism in their designs, so
the Navajos give it to them. some Navajo designs are natural developments
from pieces of silver that have come into their possession. For example,
tubular beads were first made from silver buttons taken from Spanish soldiers
whom they had killed in battle. And the pronged pieces in the beautiful
so-called squash blossom necklace are the buttons which were sewed along
the outside seams, from hip to ankle, of Spanish army officers' pants.
They really represent the pomegranate blossom. The horseshoe-like piece
hanging in the center of this necklace is taken from a device meaning
"Godspeed" that was used on old Spanish bridles. It rested on
the horse's forehead, ending in two palms turned inward. The Navajo borrowed
the design and replaced the hands with two turquoise stones.
The Navajo began combining turquoise with silver, it is said, some fifty
years ago. It is a poor Navajo who has no turquoise. Turquoise us found
in Turquoise Mountain in Arizona; Los Carrillos, New Mexico; Sand Bernardino
County, California; and Nye County, Nevada. It is also imported from Persia
and Egypt. Turquoise is a basic phosphate of copper and aluminum. The
copper gives it its bluish tone. The color of turquoise varies from greenish-gray,
yellowish-green, apple-green, and greenish-blue to sky-blue, the latter
being the most valuable. Its color fades in time and is destroyed by heat.
Perspiration also affects it. A restoration of its natural color can be
effected by treating it with ammonium. Bone and fossil turquoise, known
as odontolite, is not true turquoise. It consists of fossil bones or teeth,
colored blue by vivionite, a hydrated iron phosphate. Ammonia will not
improve the color of odontolite. Pgs. 167-170
Navajos, Gods, Tom-toms; By S.H. Babington, 1950.
Western
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