Beaded – Hammered Hamilton & Inches Silver Kilt Buckle
Beaded – Hammered Hamilton & Inches Silver Kilt Buckle
Beaded – Hammered Hamilton & Inches Silver Kilt Buckle
Hammered bead sterling silver kilt belt buckle. Made to order by the Royal silversmith. Hamilton & Inches Edinburgh hallmarked.
Hand made to order.
Please email if you require for a certain date to check time from order. Approx 6 - 8 weeks
Including Agate jewellery, Scottish hallmarked sterling silver, vintage glengarry badges, plaid brooches, kilt pins and bracelets. With jewellery from classic Edinburgh and Glasgow makers like Robert Allison and Thomas Kerr Ebbutt and provincial Scottish silversmiths.
Scottish Highland Dress Silver Wear – We have selected a fine range of gentleman’s Highland jewellery to complete your outfit. We offer you a wonderful range of sterling silver kilt pins, hand crafted silver sgian dubhs, bespoke sporrans, kilt belt buckles and silver buttons from the classic to the contemporary, all handcrafted in fine sterling silver. We offer a wide range of silver clan badges and crests that can be added to many of the designs. We also offer the option of having personalised engraving on many of the items, making them family heirlooms and treasured antiques of the future.
All handcrafted in Scotland with Edinburgh hallmarks from the workshops of Hamilton & Inch and our Highland Regimental silversmith.
We have a passion for fine antique and collectible sgian dubh’s and Highland dirks. We source antique Jacobite styles of the 18th century, high Victorian styles and regimental patterns of WW1 – WW2. Our sgian dubh and dirk range make wonderful addition to any Highland dress collection.
Our range of fine hallmarked sterling silver skean dubh’s made by the Highland regimental silversmith and Royal silversmiths Hamilton & Inches in Edinburgh, Scotland. We can engrave many of these skean dubhs for presentation gifts.
Vintage antique Sgian Dubhs – Scottish sgian skean dubhs from Scotland – The Gaelic sgian dubh meaning “black knife”, where “black” may refer to the usual colour of the handle of the knife. It is also suggested that “black” means secret, or hidden, as in the word blackmail. This is based on the stories and theories surrounding the knife’s origin and the meaning of “Dubh” in Gaelic, in particular those associated with the Highland custom of depositing weapons at the entrance to a house prior to entering as a guest. Despite this practice, a small twin edged-dagger, (‘Mattucashlass’), concealed under the armpit, combined with a smaller knife, (‘Sgian dubh’).