Special Value Offer: Silver Navajo Spoon with Feather-design Handle [SOLD]
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- Category: Silverware - Flatware
- Origin: Diné of the Navajo Nation
- Medium: silver
- Size: 6-1/8” long
- Item # C3393C SOLD
Special Value Offer: the consignor of this spoon has authorized a price reduction of 20% from the original price of $525 to a new price of $420.
This elaborately decorated silver spoon features a feather-pattern handle and a stamped bowl of elaborate symbols. It dates to circa 1900. Spoons such as this appeared in pamphlets and catalogs of Navajo traders as early as 1902 and possibly earlier. Traders such as Lorenzo Hubbell, C. N. Cotton, and J. B. Moore featured them. Moore advertised them at $1.50 per oz.
The fascination with Navajo-made silver spoons waned around 1915. Navajo smiths switched from making souvenir spoons to making, on special order, complete table service silver.
This spoon comes with a specially-made display stand that permits the spoon to be displayed in a frontal view.
Condition: original condition
Provenance: Medicine Man Gallery, Santa Fe
private Virginia family collection
Recommended Reading; Navajo Spoons: Indian Artistry and the Souvenir Trade, 1880s - 1940s by Cindra Kline
- Category: Silverware - Flatware
- Origin: Diné of the Navajo Nation
- Medium: silver
- Size: 6-1/8” long
- Item # C3393C SOLD
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