This article appeared in the April 1999 issue of JCK:

Identifying the Materials in Antique Jewelry

Jewelry once considered disposable or of little value may merit a second look. Here are some tips on identifying what pieces are made of.

by Sheryl Gross Shatz


Whenever you’re buying, selling, or appraising antique or vintage jewelry, you first need to determine what material the piece is made of. This can be a challenge because lookalike materials can easily fool the untrained eye. Here’s help.

They paid what? Collectors pay large sums for what used to be called “secondary jewelry.” Auction prices for antique and vintage items – earrings, necklaces, brooches, tiaras, lockets, hair combs, chatelaine elements, stick pins, hat pins – often seem high. It may be hard to believe, for example, that a collector will pay $1,500 for a plastic bangle, $250 for a peat brooch, or $385 for a rubber locket. But it happens all the time.

To understand why, remember that the value of these items is based not on the worth of the materials but rather on the workmanship. A chunk of Bakelite, a plastic patented in 1909, is not in itself valuable. But when it’s a finished item carved with an intricate design and executed in a bright color, the value skyrockets. Nostalgia, whimsy, provenance, demand, rarity – all of these factors can boost the price of antique and vintage jewelry. The very fact that an item resembles a piece worn by a famous person can enhance its value.

Victorian jewelry is popular among today’s collectors. This includes hair jewelry and mourning pieces made of jet, vulcanite, and bog oak. Sometimes you’ll find mourning pieces with imitation materials of glass, Bakelite, and the newer plastics.

As with any previously owned items, beware of myths and family stories. What Grandmom believed to be jet may actually be glass. Her “cherry amber” beads could be Bakelite. Family members may not know for sure when and where an item was bought. Grandmom may still have been shopping and receiving gifts well into her later years, which means some of her items may not be old at all. Obtain information from your client, but be sure to check out the identification and age for yourself.

What to look for. When inspecting the material, note the following:

These guidelines and criteria generally can make it easier to identify the material used in antique and vintage jewelry. No longer will you need to turn away your customers’ “mystery pieces.”

Sheryl Gross Shatz, a Certified Gemologist who teaches at Santiago Canyon College in Orange, Calif., is the author of What’s It Made Of? A Jewelry Materials Identification Guide. All photos from Warman’s Jewelry, 2nd ed., by Christie Romero.