Thai Hill Tribe Silver
97% Pure Silver
Beautiful And Unique!
The Smallest, Littlest, Tiniest Engraved Silver Bead Caps We Have Ever Seen!
Please Note New Measurements 2.2mm X 1.8mm
Quantity Of 50
- We have had customers tell us these work great with 4mm bicone beads.
- These little bead caps are also a great item to use in any really delicate work.
- Use to set off small briolettes and other diminutive beads with the glow of silver.
- If you have purchased these from us before, please note slightly larger measurements. As these beads are hand-made, the sizes can vary from batch to batch.
- Each 1.8mm long by 2.2mm wide beadcap has engraved lines radiating around it, which have been lightly antiqued for a more defined appearance.
- These little beadcaps are quite solid except for the holes -- they are shaped more like solid cones, not hollow cups. The holes will take from .012" to .015" beading wire, or a size 2 Griffin silk cord. Will also fit on the Fireline and PowerPro thread and monofilament thread we carry.
- Quantity: 50 Hill Tribe Silver TINIEST Engraved Bead Caps.
ABOUT THE HILL TRIBES OF THAILAND:
There are many semi-nomadic Hill Tribes that live in the highlands of northen Thailand, some of them roaming freely back and forth across the borders of Burma and Laos. Their way of life has changed little in almost 2,000 years. There are seven major tribal groups: KAREN, HMONG (MEO), YAO, LISU, LAHU, LAWA and AKHA. Each ethnic group of tribes has its own distinctive culture, including tribal dress and crafts. High status in the communities is reserved for silversmiths, for with these tribes' frequent wanderings from place to place came the need to transport worldly wealth easily, and silver jewelry fulfills both this need and the desire for adornment. The hill tribe people regard silver as currency and an indication of wealth and status of the family of the wearer. Jewelry is normally made from silver, most melted down from Indian and Burmese silver coins. Hill tribe members, especially women, wear every item of silver they possess, all the time. Their profusion of ornaments may include heavy silver belts and bracelets, headdresses composed of silver coins, huge earrings, and necklaces hung with such useful implements as toothpicks, scissors, and tweezers, also made of silver. Silver also has a religious significance and is thought to protect the wearer against evil spirits. Great time and imagination is invested in the production of these articles within each family, as they represent status and express pride.