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Navajo Indian Bolo Tie Malachite Sterling Silver Roger Jones Silversmith and artist, Navajo, Roger Jones has handmade a stunning Bolo Tie. He has fashioned a wonderful sterling silver setting with great design work around the outside and sterling silver roping to highlight the main part of the bolo tie.
The bolo tie measures approximately 2" long and 1-3/8" wide at the top (the widest) and 3/4" wide at the bottom (the narrowest).
The sterling silver ends measure 1-3/4" long each. The cord is 34" PLUS the ends = 37-1/2" long. The slide with the decorations can go up and down with ease--placing the decoration where you want it.
THE BOLO TIE STORY The bolo, or bola, tie is so common in the west today that many people are surprised to find that it is relatively new. In the late 1940s, a silversmith named Victor Cedarstaff went riding with friends in the Bradshaw Mountains outside Wickenburg, Arizona. When the wind blew his hat off, Cedarstaff removed the hatband, which had a silver buckle he did not want to lose, and put it around his neck. When his friends complimented him on the new apparel, Cedarstaff returned home, and wove a leather string. He added silver balls to the ends and ran it through a turquoise buckle. Cedarstaff later patented the new neckwear, which was called the bolo because it resembled the lengths of rope used by Argentine gauchos to catch game or cattle. Now mass-produced, and bolos are usually made with cord & with a silver or turquoise design. They are common throughout the west and are often worn for business. In 1971 Arizona legislature named the bolo the official state neckwear.
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