X
Vintage Victorian Design Queen Lady Cameo Enamel
Vintage Victorian Design Queen Lady Cameo Enamel
Vintage Victorian Design Queen Lady Cameo Enamel

Vintage Victorian Design Queen Lady Cameo Enamel Brooch Pin

Product ID : 6237579


Galleon Product ID 6237579
Shipping Weight 0.02 lbs
I think this is wrong?
Model 43
Manufacturer Plum Street Gifts & More LLC
Shipping Dimension 2.28 x 2.09 x 0.59 inches
I think this is wrong?
-
No price yet.
Price not yet available.

Pay with

Vintage Victorian Design Queen Lady Cameo Enamel Features

  • Metals Type: Zinc Alloy

  • Weight: 10 g

  • Size: Approx. 4*3cm

  • Gold colored back


About Vintage Victorian Design Queen Lady Cameo Enamel

Picture an antique cameo and the first image that probably pops into your mind is a woman's profile carved out of white shell against a coral background. That certainly describes a cameo, but cameos come in a much wider range of materials and designs. In fine jewelry, the cameo is defined as an ornament carved in relief from a high-quality material such as stone, shell, coral, Gutta-percha, bog oak, ivory, lava, or mother-of-pearl. In costume jewelry, cameos are generally made from molded plastic or glass. The most common cameo motif is the portrait. In the past, these bore the likeness of an actual person, usually a celebrity of the day—a ruler, scholar, or philosopher. Early in the 19th century, cameos started to feature an anonymous Roman woman wearing no jewelry. Victorian women on the Grand Tour—a traveling rite of passage for upper-class Europeans—sought out lava cameos carved with the mystery woman's image when they were in Italy. These affluent Victorians eventually had a big influence on cameos when they demanded a more familiar-looking lady, with a thinner neck, her hair up, and wearing jewelry. Vintage cameos also incorporated religious figures and scenes, floral motifs, and images from mythology. In particular, ancient Roman motifs have been popular for cameos since they first appeared during the reign of Alexander the Great, when they were made of agate, onyx, and sardonyx. In the salons of 18th-century Europe, carved gemstones were all the rage with high-society ladies. Cameo makers of the time would take Plaster of Paris molds of these carved gemstones as records of notable cameo collections. At the time, cameos were a sign of wealth and privilege, but glass paste brought cameos to the mainstream. Scottish artisan James Tassie began making molds of esteemed cameo collections to recreate the images as glass-plate cameos that could pass as carved jewels.