na002294
Regular price $597.00 Save $-597.00There are very few, if any, Kewa Pueblo jewelers who make the thinnest hand-rolled beads anymore. Wilbert Calabaza may be the last person making them and they are like wearing colored air. This ten strand necklace is made from white and tan shell and turquoise. It has a hook and eye clasp. More about Kewa Pueblo hand-rolled beads below.
Size: 23" Long
Hand-rolled beads are made by chipping out pieces of stone or shell. A hole is drilled into the center of each chip. The chips are strung on a wire and rolled, and rolled, and rolled until they are all the same width. Sometimes they are graduated – a difficult task! They are then polished until smooth. There are hand-rolled necklaces from Kewa Pueblo that are over a thousand years old. In the “old days”, the holes were drilled with a hand-pump drill, strung on handmade string, and rolled on sandstone. There is nothing quite like hand-rolled Kewa beads!
Many of the Pueblos in New Mexico took on Spanish names after colonization and are now taking back their original names. Kewa Pueblo is the traditional name of the place and the people. It was known as Santo Domingo Pueblo for many, many years.
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