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  2. Florentine crafts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florentine_crafts

    Florentine craft box with decoupage and painted gold gilding. Florentine crafts made in Florence, Italy , are a centuries-old tradition maintained by several artisan guilds. Florentine style, especially in items produced in from the mid-19th century onward, typically reflect a contemporary interpretation of Renaissance art and furnishings.

  3. Decorative box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decorative_box

    Decorative box. A decorative box is a form of packaging that is generally more than just functional, but also intended to be decorative and artistic. Many such boxes are used for promotional packaging, both commercially and privately. Historical objects are usually called caskets if larger than a few inches in more than one dimension, with only ...

  4. Jewellery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewellery

    Jewellery making in the Pacific started later than in other areas because of recent human settlement. Early Pacific jewellery was made of bone, wood, and other natural materials, and thus has not survived. Most Pacific jewellery is worn above the waist, with headdresses, necklaces, hair pins, and arm and waist belts being the most common pieces.

  5. Russian lacquer art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_lacquer_art

    Russian lacquer art. A Palekh jewelry box depicting a scene from the fairy tale Tsarevitch Ivan, the Fire Bird and the Gray Wolf. Russian lacquer art developed from the art of icon painting, which came to an end with the collapse of Imperial Russia. The icon painters, who previously had been employed by supplying not only churches but people's ...

  6. Medieval jewelry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Jewelry

    Medieval Jewelry. Germanic fibulae, early 5th century. The Dunstable Swan Jewel, a livery badge in gold and ronde bosse enamel, about 1400. Gold belt end and buckle, c. 600, Avar version of Byzantine style. The Middle Ages was a period that spanned approximately 1000 years and is normally restricted to Europe and the Byzantine Empire.

  7. Cheapside Hoard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheapside_Hoard

    Cheapside Hoard. The Cheapside Hoard is a hoard of jewellery from the late 16th and early 17th centuries, discovered in 1912 by workmen using a pickaxe to excavate in a cellar at 30–32 Cheapside in London, on the corner with Friday Street. They found a buried wooden box containing more than 400 pieces of Elizabethan and Jacobean jewellery ...

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