| Length: | 22” |
| Width: | 1 mm chain, T-bar is 1 3/8" |
| Material: | Tests for gold filled |
| Weight: | 4 grams |
| Mark: | No mark |
| Era: | vintage and antique chains and components. |
| ● | Bright patina with minimal surface wear to the setting. No dents or misshapen links. |
| ● | All components are vintage and antique that were married together. |
| ● | Secure, dog-clip clasp. |
On Victorian. A young Queen Victoria assumed her role in 1837 and her taste in jewelry quickly became culturally influential, within England and beyond. Her relationship to jewelry was enmeshed with her husband, Prince Albert, who gifted the Queen for their engagement, a snake ring, embedded with an emerald (her birthstone) in its head. Continuing from the Georgian era and intensified by Queen Victoria’s taste, sentimental and figural jewelry was a major trend throughout the Victorian era. When certain ideas and words were deemed too forward or improper to be spoken, jewelry and symbolic meaning was used to communicate what was left unsaid.