Jewellery

When I was a child men only ever wore a wristwatch and sometimes a signet ring. Rarely a wedding ring. Women, however, had a few more adornments. A married woman wore a wedding ring and an engagement ring. Wristwatches for women were dainty and pretty.

Most women in my childhood didn’t have pierced ears. When dressing up and going out they would sometimes wear a pair of clip on earrings. These were usually either diamanté or pearl.

Pearls (real or fake) and other beads were very popular as necklaces, mainly for occasions.

An item which is less often seen now is the brooch. Neither my mum nor my grandmothers ever left the house in a coat or a jacket without a brooch on the lapel. Even girls wore brooches on coats and they were a popular gift to buy for sisters, friends, mothers and grandmothers. I have a few brooches which were my mum’s and my grandmothers’ and also a few of mine from when I was a young girl – because young girls wore them too.

These were mine when I was a girl.
My grandmother loved this brooch and wore it a lot. It’s from the late 1950s.
Three very old brooches which my other grandmother gave me (she knew I loved old things with a story!). They had been in the family since Victorian times so were probably my great grandmother’s.

At one time one of us, probably me or my sister rather than my brother, had been given a brooch making kit as a present. Crafting kits were very popular back in the 50s! It was a kit for making brooches out of felt shapes and included a brooch pin to put on the back. We made my grandmother one and she proudly pinned it on the lapel of her coat and there it stayed for ages. We thought it was beautiful, it was probably awful!

On the subject of grandmothers, neither of mine ever left the house without a hat on. They were both born in the 1890s so were Victorian babies. Their hats always had a hatpin or two in them. I’ve looked hatpins up and I found that ‘They were a fashion necessity in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras.’ In earlier times women always had long hair, not short and wore it piled up on top, never loose. The hat pin went into the fabric of the hat, through the pile of tied up hair and out the other side. This kept the hat in position and stopped it blowing away in a breeze. But they were also a form of jewellery as the head of the pin became more and more ornamented. They are now quite collectible, especially the ones with precious and semi-precious stones and pearls.

Pierced navels, lips, eyebrows etc were yet to come!

This is a personal blog and not a historical document. I check facts thoroughly but my posts are mostly my recollections. Credit to Google, Google Images and Wikipedia. I try to avoid infringing copyright but if anyone objects to an image being used please contact me and it will be removed.

7 thoughts on “Jewellery

  1. yes it is a shame about brooches. It seems to be worn just any old how and with anything but….

    I love jewellery and have a couple of brooches one is a wee green frog that has diamantes on it and another one is quite large in blue shades with sparklies on it depicting a peacock it really is lovely and when we went to town Mum always was dressed up, well we all were with a hat and gloves and the baby in the pram had really lovely clothes on with a fancy cover on the pram lol and men wore hats and doffed them if you were near them, in fact I really miss that in a man these days, it was always a sign of politeness to me and they too always were tidy. I feel jewellery is worn very casually these days and with anything but I love diamonds and used to love seeing what our lovely * Queen Elizabeth was wearing and how they glittered in certain lights. Jewellery used to be termed ‘costume jewellery’ if you wore it with a ‘costume lol, the names for things we had.

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  2. I have some of these that were passed down to me. I do know that my great grandmother always had a brooch on her coat. My own mother had a ship brooch that she always wore on a blue dress jacket. They each kind of tell a story, not unlike a charm bracelet. Lovely family keepsakes to pass from one generation to the next. They certainly don’t take up a lot of room!

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