All About Scottish Agate

Antique Scottish agate, or “pebble” jewelry is bold, sentimental and a tad bit kitschy: a perfect embodiment of the Victorian era. 

Victorian Scottish agate luckenbooth brooch, c. mid-nineteenth century.  Currently available at Gray & Davis. 

Victorian Scottish agate luckenbooth brooch, c. mid-nineteenth century.  Currently available at Gray & Davis. 

The same way Woody Allen’s Gil Pender ached to time travel back to the roaring twenties in Midnight in Paris, nineteenth-century Brits pined away for a life in Medieval Scotland. The country’s romantic castles and dramatic, empty landscapes provided the perfect backdrop for urbanites caught up in the industrial revolution to imagine themselves as noble knights and their lovely ladies.

Queen Victoria herself was an enthusiastic proponent of all things Scottish. In 1847 she purchased Balmoral castle in Aberdeenshire as a vacation home, and published affectionate memoirs of hunting for gems in Scottish streams. 

Illustration of Queen Victoria rocking some tartan. 

Illustration of Queen Victoria rocking some tartan. 

Tourists were swept up in the Queen’s fascination with the highlands, and followed her there in search of their own authentic Scottish experience. Local jewelers and merchants capitalized on this influx of vacationers by producing jewelry featuring stones like the ones Queen Victoria had found in the creeks near Balmoral. Multicolored mosaics of striped and speckled agates, smoky quartzes and pink granite were carefully arranged in engraved settings of silver and gold.

Many of these jewels were fabricated as traditional Scottish forms dating back to the Middle Ages - like the luckenbooth, or crowned heart brooch pictured above. Scottish style agates were also used in more contemporary Victorian designs, as demonstrated by the two stunning bangles below. 

Two hinged bangles in silver, Scottish agate and cairngorn. c. mid-nineteenth century. Currently available at Gray & Davis.

Two hinged bangles in silver, Scottish agate and cairngorn. c. mid-nineteenth century. Currently available at Gray & Davis.

Scottish jewelry was at its height of popularity between 1845 – 1870, but remained fashionable until the turn of the century. A fair number of pretty pieces survive today, waiting to be taken from their dusty velvet boxes by those nostalgic for a time long before their own.

Antique Children's Jewelry

For the eighteenth and most of the nineteenth centuries, children were thought of as miniature adults. This is great, because it means that there is lots of antique miniature children’s jewelry for us to find. It was not uncommon for infants and young children to receive rings, necklaces, bracelets and even earrings as gifts from friends and relatives.

Coral beads were particularly popular, as the material was thought to protect children from evil forces.

Baby rings were made with the same care as their adult counterparts. Today, we like wearing them as midi rings between the first and second knuckle.

Victorian 10k gold and 14k gold child's rings with enamel, pearl and garnet, at Gray & Davis. 

Victorian 10k gold and 14k gold child's rings with enamel, pearl and garnet, at Gray & Davis. 

To get the most out of your investment, tiny pairs of bracelets were made to be outgrown and clasped together to form one grown up bracelet!

Victorian pair of baby bracelets, at Gray & Davis. 

Victorian pair of baby bracelets, at Gray & Davis. 

Victorian baby bracelet pair as one large bracelet. 

Victorian baby bracelet pair as one large bracelet. 

If you'd like more information, Shirley Bury knows all. Check out her "Jewellery 1789-1910," one of our favorite resources. 

Museum Monday: Ancient Inspirations

One of the most looked-at bracelets in the G&D cases right now is this Victorian lioness bangle:

18k yellow gold bracelet, c. mid - late nineteenth century. Available at our 47th St. Shop!

18k yellow gold bracelet, c. mid - late nineteenth century. Available at our 47th St. Shop!

Archaeologically-inspired jewelry was incredibly trendy during the Victorian era, and this bangle is no exception. A look through some the collections at the MET reveals some ancient jewels that surely influenced the unknown designer of our nineteenth-century piece. 

Gold & Copper Alloy Bracelet w/ Lion-Head Finials. Cypriot, 5th Century BC. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 74.51.3559.

Gold & Copper Alloy Bracelet w/ Lion-Head Finials. Cypriot, 5th Century BC. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 74.51.3559.

Silver Bracelet with Gold Lion Head Finials. Greek, 5th - 4th Century BCE. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 30.115.86.

Silver Bracelet with Gold Lion Head Finials. Greek, 5th - 4th Century BCE. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 30.115.86.

Some things really never go out of style.