The Trading Post Drawer
Every old trading post has one.
The drawer that never quite gets emptied.
A handful of rings gathered over decades—each one carrying a different mine, a different silversmith, a different story. Some were everyday companions. Some were souvenirs from unforgettable trips. Some probably celebrated birthdays, anniversaries, or a day when someone simply saw the perfect stone and couldn’t walk away.
I love collections like this because they’re impossible to recreate. You can commission a new ring, but you can’t commission fifty years of history.
This collection features an assortment of vintage Native American sterling silver turquoise rings, each handcrafted around a unique natural stone. From vivid sky-blue cabochons to heavily webbed collectors’ material, every ring stands on its own while together telling the story of Southwestern craftsmanship across generations.
No two are alike.
That’s exactly how I like it.
Artifact Registry
Artifact: The Trading Post Drawer
Maker: Various Native American Silversmiths
Origin: American Southwest - acquired from a closed trading post in Arizona
Era: Primarily Mid-20th Century through Late 20th Century
Materials
- Sterling Silver
- Natural Turquoise
- Hand-fabricated settings
Specifications
- Collection of vintage Native American rings
- Multiple turquoise varieties represented
- Traditional hand-fabricated bezels
- Assorted sizes
- One-of-a-kind natural stones throughout
Collector’s Gallery Value: $350–$1,200 each
Collector’s Gallery Value represents the estimated value of comparable vintage Native American rings offered through premier galleries or specialist Native American art dealers. Values vary according to artist attribution, turquoise mine, rarity, craftsmanship, condition, and collector demand. It serves as a gallery reference rather than a direct selling price.
Field Observation
What makes this group compelling isn’t that every ring matches—it’s that none of them do. Together they read like decades of collecting, with each stone preserving a different landscape, a different bench jeweler, and a different chapter of Southwestern jewelry history.
Eric’s Notes from the Field
I have a soft spot for vintage rings.
They’re personal. Unlike a squash blossom or a concho belt, a ring gets worn every day. It bumps into steering wheels, coffee mugs, fence posts, and workbenches. It becomes part of somebody’s life.
When I buy collections like this, I always wonder about the hands that wore them before mine ever picked them up.
Now they’re waiting for the next chapter.
Maybe that’s the best part of collecting.
You’re never really buying an object.
You’re becoming part of its story.
The Trading Post Drawer
Every old trading post has one.
The drawer that never quite gets emptied.
A handful of rings gathered over decades—each one carrying a different mine, a different silversmith, a different story. Some were everyday companions. Some were souvenirs from unforgettable trips. Some probably celebrated birthdays, anniversaries, or a day when someone simply saw the perfect stone and couldn’t walk away.
I love collections like this because they’re impossible to recreate. You can commission a new ring, but you can’t commission fifty years of history.
This collection features an assortment of vintage Native American sterling silver turquoise rings, each handcrafted around a unique natural stone. From vivid sky-blue cabochons to heavily webbed collectors’ material, every ring stands on its own while together telling the story of Southwestern craftsmanship across generations.
No two are alike.
That’s exactly how I like it.
Artifact Registry
Artifact: The Trading Post Drawer
Maker: Various Native American Silversmiths
Origin: American Southwest - acquired from a closed trading post in Arizona
Era: Primarily Mid-20th Century through Late 20th Century
Materials
- Sterling Silver
- Natural Turquoise
- Hand-fabricated settings
Specifications
- Collection of vintage Native American rings
- Multiple turquoise varieties represented
- Traditional hand-fabricated bezels
- Assorted sizes
- One-of-a-kind natural stones throughout
Collector’s Gallery Value: $350–$1,200 each
Collector’s Gallery Value represents the estimated value of comparable vintage Native American rings offered through premier galleries or specialist Native American art dealers. Values vary according to artist attribution, turquoise mine, rarity, craftsmanship, condition, and collector demand. It serves as a gallery reference rather than a direct selling price.
Field Observation
What makes this group compelling isn’t that every ring matches—it’s that none of them do. Together they read like decades of collecting, with each stone preserving a different landscape, a different bench jeweler, and a different chapter of Southwestern jewelry history.
Eric’s Notes from the Field
I have a soft spot for vintage rings.
They’re personal. Unlike a squash blossom or a concho belt, a ring gets worn every day. It bumps into steering wheels, coffee mugs, fence posts, and workbenches. It becomes part of somebody’s life.
When I buy collections like this, I always wonder about the hands that wore them before mine ever picked them up.
Now they’re waiting for the next chapter.
Maybe that’s the best part of collecting.
You’re never really buying an object.
You’re becoming part of its story.