Pretty order but Bold Vintage Hobé 1942 Sterling Silver Oval Floral Brooch Pin - Roses & Large Leaves - So Lovely! 1861
This is a cute pretty and very dainty Hobé mid-1940's sterling silver.
This is a cute, pretty, and very dainty Hobé mid-1940's sterling silver floral brooch depicting two roses, a spiral vine, and three huge etched leaves on the oval surround. According to research, the closest patents filed by WW Hobé is 131,857 granted in March 1942 (see last picture) and the only difference is that this brooch has two instead of three flowers/roses.
As any piece this old, it has VERY LIGHT natural patina but this piece is in excellent condition.
The brooch is signed "Hobé Sterling" in a triangle silver raised cartouche on a filigree back.
The brooch weighs 16g and measures 2-3/4" x 1-3/8".
This is a lovely piece of Hobé 1940s history and would be a great addition to any collection!
I thank you for your visit and please check back with RhinestoneCafé - I will be adding new Hobé items regularly! Also feel free to ask questions, and make an offer!
Please note that the international shipping cost listed is an estimate and could be LOWER or higher than the $13.95 listed, depending on the country it's going to - happy to discuss.
About Hobé From Collectors' Weekly:
"Hobé Cie was founded in 1887 by goldsmith Jacques Hobé, but when costume-jewelry collectors think of Hobé, they picture the tasselled and beaded necklaces made by Jacques' son, William, who established an American offshoot of the company in 1927. That put Hobé at the beginning of the American costume-jewelry boom between the two world wars. In fact, some scholars believe that Hobé actually had a hand in the phrase “costume jewelry” itself. After the younger Hobé landed in New York, but before he started his company, one of the his first assignments was to make costumes and jewelry for the "Ziegfeld Follies." According to some historians, Florenz Ziegfeld described the jewelry that accompanied Hobé's costumes as costume jewelry. Hobé's showbiz origins served the company well. By the 1940s and '50s, Hollywood stars such as Bette Davis and Ava Gardner were wearing Hobé. Especially prized today are the floral pins of that era, which featured tight clusters of vermeil petals. Earlier order Hobé pieces that remain popular with collectors include filigreed bracelets and pins, some of which featured Victorian-style portraits or Japanese netsuke-like figures as focal points."
http://www.collectorsweekly.com/costume-jewelry/hobe