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Home > Bone Bead Necklaces with Spiritual Amulets

Bone Bead Necklaces with Spiritual Amulets



Bone bead necklace with a Star of David  pendant   code: Bone necklace Pair 3933

Description: Two bone bead necklaces: one with a Star of David pendant and the other with a tooth pendant




   $12
 
Star of David Bone Necklace
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  code: Star of David Bone Necklace DSC00754


   $10  
 
Genuine bone bead necklace. Hamsa - Star of David pendant. Bestseller.
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  code: Bone Necklace 1-DSC01085
Description: Genuine bone bead necklace. Hamsa - Star of David pendant. Bestseller. Beads strung on wire, solderd joints, quality clasp, with extension chain, handmade in Israel.

   $25


   $10
 
ballchain with an ox bone tooth and a Star of David with a Swarovski crystal
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  code: Bone Tooth necklace 3444
Description: 60cm ballchain with an ox bone tooth and a Star of David with a Swarovski crystal



  $10   
 
Indian bone bead necklace with a hollow Hamsa pendant
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  code: Bone Bead Necklace 822
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a hollow Hamsa pendant
Necklace length: 44cm

   $10
 
Indian bone bead necklace with a old coin style charm embossed with a verse part in Hebrew from Psalms (
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  code: Bone Bead Necklace 823
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a old coin style charm embossed with a verse part in Hebrew from Psalms ("Yea though I walk through the valley of death, I will fear no evil: for Thou art with me;" Psalm 23:4 )
Necklace length: 44cm

   $10
 
Indian bone bead necklace with a Kabbalh amulet for purifying negative energies
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  code: Bone Bead Necklace 825
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a Kabbalh amulet for purifying negative energies
Necklace length: 44cm


 
 Indian bone bead necklace with a Star of David pendant
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  code: Bone Bead Necklace 826
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a Star of David pendant
Necklace length: 44cm

   $10
 
 Indian bone bead necklace with a Kabbalah charm for protection against the evil eye
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  code: Bone Bead Necklace 827
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a Kabbalah charm for protection against the evil eye
Necklace length: 44cm


 
  Indian bone bead necklace with a dogatag embossed with a Star of David on one side and a
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  code: Bone Bead Necklace 828
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a dogatag embossed with a Star of David on one side and a "Hai" on the other
Necklace length: 44cm

   $10
 
Indian bone bead necklace with a Small dogtag engraved (in Hebrew) with a part of a verse from King Solomon's Shir Hashirim (Song of Songs):
Click to enlarge
  code: Bone Bead Necklace 829
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a Small dogtag engraved (in Hebrew) with a part of a verse from King Solomon's Shir Hashirim (Song of Songs): "Set me as a seal upon thy heart, as a seal upon thine arm; for love is strong as death"
Necklace length: 44cm

   $10
 
Indian bone bead necklace with a bone Hamsa charm
Click to enlarge
  code: Bone Bead Necklace 830
Material: Metal and Bone
Description: Indian bone bead necklace with a bone Hamsa charm
Necklace length: 44cm

   $10
 

Bone Jewelry Lives On

From bone beads and necklaces to earrings and charms, bone jewelry has always been popular and still is. How are bone beads made and where do they come from?

Recently, while shopping at a jewelry store in Tel Aviv I saw a necklace that appealed to me very much. It was made with earthly yellow and brown beads which had a very wild and primeval feel to them. They were carved with simple, almost childish but mystical geometrical designs. I wasn't sure if the beads were made of bone or wood so I asked the seller. He said they were all bone. Then he added half jokingly: "It's from India…there everything is made into beads after it dies." I was stunned. I wanted to ask him if that includes human beings but I didn't because I didn't think he would be able to give me a knowledgeable answer. Instead, I decided to research the subject myself. I didn't find much about human bones but I learned a lot about bone jewelry in general. The following is a summary of my findings.

Overview

Since the dawn of antiquity to modern times man has been using animals for his different needs. People eat animals, grow them as pets, use them for work and amusement, and also for making tools, clothes and decorative ornaments like jewelry. Jewelry is mostly made using the harder parts of the animal, like bones, horns, and teeth. Cow and buffalo bone are commonly used, although camel, deer and ox bone are abundant too. Elephant tusks are illegal today, but fossilized tusks of extinct animals like mammoths and mastodons are legal and can be found in spring time in river banks in Alaska and Northern Russia when the snows melt. Bone, which is made from the mineral Calcium Carbonate, is usually white or yellowish in color. Horns are made of Keratin – a fibrous protein that is also found in wool, quilts and feathers. In Indonesia, considered as the world's biggest bone jewelry manufacturer, the Water Buffalo's (Bubalus Bubalis) horns, which are black or dark brown, are preferred by jewelry makers.

Trends

Animal bone is soft and light and can be easily hand carved, fashioned and engraved to make a wide variety of jewelry, like necklaces, pendants, amulets, charms, beads, spacers, earrings and connectors. In ancient, ethnic and tribal cultures bone jewelry was also used as money and symbols of wealth. Today, with the growing global consciousness to preservation of the environment, bone jewelry is growing more popular. It is considered natural, organic, and therefore eco friendly. In tribal and surfer jewelry designs bone beads blend naturally with other organic materials like wood, leather, hemp or cotton. It is now trendy to decorate bone beads or amulets with primitive motif designs.

The Spirit of Carving

Bone carving is known to exist worldwide, from the Eskimo culture, India, and China to many native American tribes. The tribal bone carver is highly respected and occupies a distinct place in the community. The Maori, New Zealand's native people, believe that the "mana" or the essence of the carver enters the piece and stays in it for eternity. Most carvers prefer carving the "Shin bone," the lower half of the leg. It is easier to clean because it has little flesh and easier to carve because it is long and straight.

Gourmets

Bone jewelry enthusiasts and collectors have their gourmets too, like dinosaur bone for example. Found in some areas of South West United States "Dino Bone" is today illegal. Over thousands of years the fossilized bone's cellular structure has been replaced with quartz, forming a stone-hard material that ranges in color from brown to black with splotches of red, blue and bright yellow.

A website specializing in organic jewelry sells animal penis ( bacula, plural – bacculum) bones. These can be found in many male mammals like rodents, bears, seals, otters, beavers, badgers, hedgehogs, wolves, coyotes , dogs, and many primates (but not humans). Female capuchin monkeys, mice, and at least some chipmunks and squirrels, have an 'os clitoris,' which is a clitoris bone.

Ethics

Some may wonder if it is ethical to use animals for jewelry. Others may think it is ethical but only if the bones are extracted from the animal after it's natural death. And there are those who oppose killing animals for any reason, even for eating. In the Indonesian island of Bali, where 90% of the population is Hindu, the cow and the Water Buffalo are considered sacred animals and are protected from any harm while still alive. But after the animals die Hindus see it important to utilize every part of them.

Preserving the Environment

Bone jewelry is considered eco friendly, but some environmentalists may have reservations. Industrial processing of bones into jewelry involves using chemicals, some of which are dangerous and smelly. To remove meat and gristle many manufacturers soak bones in either hydrochloric or sulfuric acid. Then, to remove protein and gelatin that can compose and rot, a dilute solution of bleach is used.

Conclusion

To my relief I have not found anyone selling human bone beads or jewelry. The closest thing I came across were human rib bones from an old chiropractor's collection in India. $15 for one, $28 a pair.


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