Navajo Bracelets
Explore Navajo Bracelets
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High Grade Natural Fox Turquoise Bracelet
ALVIN YELLOWHORSERegular price $12,549.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $12,549.00 -
Heavy Gauge Sterling Silver Triangulated Bracelet
ROLAND DIXSONRegular price $749.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $749.00 -
High Grade Natural Kingman Web Turquoise 2-Stone Bracelet With 18K Gold Bezels
ALVIN YELLOWHORSERegular price $7,295.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $7,295.00 -
High Grade Natural Morenci Turquoise Bracelet With Multi-Color Raised Cobblestone Inlay
ALVIN YELLOWHORSERegular price $26,695.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $26,695.00 -
Hollow Braided Link Bracelet With Kingman Turquoise
MARK YELLOWHORSERegular price $425.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $425.00 -
Multi-Color Raised Cobblestone Inlay Bracelet
JULIUS BURBANKRegular price $2,975.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,975.00 -
Multi-Stone Micro Inlay Bracelet
ERVIN P. TSOSIERegular price $4,775.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $4,775.00 -
Natural Birdseye Kingman Turquoise Bracelet
CECIL ATENCIORegular price $875.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $875.00 -
Natural Bisbee Turquoise 3-Stone Row Bracelet
TOMMY JACKSONRegular price $2,549.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,549.00 -
Natural Bisbee Turquoise Cluster Bracelet
TOMMY JACKSONRegular price $5,449.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $5,449.00 -
Natural Black Canyon Variscite Raised Cobblestone Inlay Bracelet
JULIUS BURBANKRegular price $2,649.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,649.00 -
Natural Egyptian Turquoise Bracelet
RON BEDONIERegular price $2,975.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,975.00 -
Natural Kingman Turquoise Cluster Bracelet
DERRICK GORDONRegular price $2,249.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,249.00 -
Natural Royston Turquoise Bracelet
ELOUISE KEERegular price $649.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $649.00 -
Natural Royston Turquoise Bracelet
ALBERT JAKERegular price $1,595.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,595.00 -
Natural Royston Turquoise Bracelet
CALVIN MARTINEZRegular price $1,459.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,459.00 -
Natural Sleeping Beauty Turquoise Row Bracelet
ERNEST ROY BEGAYRegular price $4,495.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $4,495.00 -
Solid Sterling Silver Bracelet
DARRYL DEAN BEGAYRegular price $1,985.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,985.00 -
Solid Sterling Silver Bracelet
CALVIN MARTINEZRegular price $985.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $985.00 -
Sonoran Gold Turquoise 5-Stone Row Bracelet
CALVIN MARTINEZRegular price $1,495.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,495.00 -
Sterling Silver Bracelet With 14K Gold Overlay
JOHNATHAN NEZRegular price $1,269.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,269.00 -
Tufa Cast Appaloosa Horse Bracelet With High Grade Natural Blue Royston Turquoise
ROBERT W. BEGAYRegular price $2,649.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,649.00 -
Traditional Sterling Silver Bracelet
ROBERT W. BEGAYRegular price $1,650.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,650.00 -
Tufa Cast Barn Swallow Bracelet
DARRYL DEAN BEGAY & ROBERT W. BEGAYRegular price $3,965.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $3,965.00 -
Tufa Cast Barn Swallow Bracelet With Natural Armenian Turquoise
ROBERT W. BEGAYRegular price $3,795.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $3,795.00 -
Tufa Cast Bracelet With Natural Lone Mountain Turquoise
REBECCA T. BEGAYRegular price $2,149.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,149.00 -
Dragon Fly Bracelet With High Grade Natural Bisbee Turquoise
DARRYL DEAN BEGAYRegular price $4,295.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $4,295.00 -
Tufa Cast High Grade Natural Bisbee Turquoise Bracelet
DARRYL DEAN BEGAYRegular price $13,875.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $13,875.00 -
Tufa Cast Horny Toad Bracelet With Natural Morenci Turquoise & 18K Gold Eyes
PHILANDER BEGAYRegular price $2,075.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,075.00 -
Tufa Cast High Grade Natural Candelaria & Bisbee Turquoise 3-Flower Bracelet
REBECCA T. BEGAYRegular price $5,025.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $5,025.00 -
Tufa Cast Monument Valley Bracelet
ROBERT W. BEGAYRegular price $2,649.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,649.00 -
Tufa Cast Multi-Color Inlay Bracelet With Interior Petroglyph Figures
PHILANDER BEGAY & ISIAH M. BEGAYRegular price $6,600.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $6,600.00 -
Tufa Cast Natural Grasshopper Turquoise Bracelet
DARRYL DEAN BEGAYRegular price $3,300.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $3,300.00 -
Tufa Cast Natural Kingman Turquoise Bracelet
MICHAEL ROANHORSERegular price $1,595.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,595.00 -
Tufa Cast Natural Morenci Turquoise Bracelet
DARRYL DEAN BEGAYRegular price $1,650.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,650.00 -
Tufa Cast Sand Hill Cranes In Night Scene Bracelet
ROBERT W. BEGAYRegular price $2,325.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,325.00 -
Tufa Cast Spider Bracelet With Natural Morenci Turquoise
PHILANDER BEGAYRegular price $2,695.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $2,695.00 -
Tufa Cast Yei Bi Chei Bracelet
LESTER JAMESRegular price $1,525.00Regular priceUnit price / perSale price $1,525.00
Navajo bracelets are among the most recognized forms of Native American jewelry, rooted in a silversmithing tradition that has been kept alive for well over a hundred years. Each piece is handmade by accomplished Navajo silversmiths using sterling silver, natural stones, and a genuine sense of cultural artistry. SilverTQ brings you a special collection of authentic pieces, making it easier than ever to find the right one.
Explore Our Collection of Navajo Bracelets
If you’re looking for jewelry made with skill and intention, you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be. Every piece here is handmade by Navajo artists with years of experience and generations of tradition, and the categories below make it easy to find your perfect match.
Turquoise Bracelets
Navajo turquoise bracelets are one of the most recognized styles in Southwest jewelry. The stones come from well-known American mines, many of which are now closed, making natural high-grade turquoise rare and valuable. Sterling silver is hand worked around each stone to complement rather than overshadow it. From simple single-stone cuffs to more detailed multi-stone pieces, there is something here for every style.
Sterling Silver Bracelets
Navajo sterling silver bracelets prove that metalwork alone can produce something truly beautiful. Silversmiths often use stamp work, appliqué, repoussé, and saw work to create detailed patterns in heavy silver. An oxidized finish deepens the contrast, making the artist’s precision stand out even more.
Vintage Bracelets
Vintage Navajo bracelets come from an earlier era of silversmithing, and have a character that newer pieces simply cannot replicate. These bracelets develop a natural patina over time that adds to the appeal. Other key markers of a vintage piece include tool marks, slight inconsistencies, or asymmetry, which make them especially sought after by collectors.
Multi-Colored Bracelets
If you love color, these bracelets are hard to ignore. Turquoise is typically paired with stones such as coral, spiny oyster, lapis lazuli, and sugilite to create rich, striking compositions. Stones are individually cut, fitted, and polished before being set into a sterling silver frame, which is then embellished with stamp work, twist wire, and more.
Cluster and Row Bracelets
Cluster bracelets feature hand-cut stones set into floral or geometric patterns across a wide silver cuff. Row bracelets are cleaner, with matched stones running consistently along the band. Both require every stone to be set individually by hand, and that care shows in the finished piece.
Tufa-Cast Bracelets
Tufa casting involves carving a pattern into volcanic stone and using it as a mold for molten silver. The silver picks up the stone’s natural texture as it sets, giving each piece an organic finish. Since the mold is destroyed after one use, every tufa cast bracelet is truly one of a kind.
Inlay Bracelets
Each inlay bracelet rewards the viewer who takes a closer look, because the detail gets more impressive the longer you study it. Each stone is cut and fitted using materials such as turquoise, coral, lapis lazuli, and mother-of-pearl. That smooth, even finish that never snags is what sets a well-made inlay bracelet apart from imitations.
Cuff Bracelets
The cuff is one of the most enduring styles in Native American jewelry, and Navajo bracelets for men are most closely associated with this bold form. Made from heavy sterling silver, the open-ended band holds its shape while allowing slight adjustment for fit. Many artists use the surface for hand-stamping, raised metalwork, or a centerpiece stone, covering everything from everyday pieces to wide statement jewelry.
What Makes Navajo Bracelets Timeless
When you wear a Navajo bracelet, you’re wearing something a silversmith poured real skill and intention into, making every piece entirely unique. Each design carries symbols meaningful to Navajo culture, from eagles and sacred mountains to natural forces like lightning and flowing water. The solid sterling silver and natural gemstones mean you’re investing in something built to last well beyond fleeting trends. It’s the kind of piece that tells a story, and that story only gets richer with time.
How to Choose a Navajo Bracelet
Having some idea of what to look for can make finding the right Navajo cuff bracelets much simpler. Keep these things in mind:
- Measure your wrist beforehand, as cuffs should fit comfortably, not too loose or too tight.
- Consider weight and width, since narrower bands suit everyday wear while broader ones work better for special occasions.
- Decide whether you prefer a colorful stone or a textured silver finish for your bracelet.
- Make sure that the inner band of your bracelet has the artist’s signature and a sterling silver stamp to confirm authenticity.
Cultural and Historical Significance of Navajo Bracelets
Navajo bracelets carry centuries of history, meaning, and artistry. Understanding that the story behind the work makes each piece of jewelry even more amazing.
History of Navajo Bracelets
Long before the advent of silversmithing, the Navajo people fashioned adornments from what the land offered: wood, stone, shell, and bone. That changed in the 1800s, when contact with Spanish and Mexican metalworkers introduced Navajo artists to silverwork for the first time. A prominent medicine man and chief named Atsidi Sani was the first to embrace the new practice, becoming the first Navajo silversmith. Since raw silver was not readily available, early pieces were melted down from coins and other traded metals. Turquoise was already an important and powerful stone for the Navajo and, once set in silver, resulted in a style so distinct and iconic it continues to be synonymous with Southwestern jewelry to this day.
Traditional Techniques
Every Navajo silversmith works with methods perfected and passed down through generations. Tufa casting pours molten silver into a hand-carved volcanic stone mold, producing a textured result that cannot be replaced twice. Hand-stamping drives iron tools into silver, leaving behind geometric and sacred patterns that date back decades. The repoussé method pushes silver from the back, so raised shapes appear naturally on the piece's front face.
Materials Used and Their Significance
Silver speaks to purity, the moon, and a deep spiritual tie to the natural world in Navajo culture. Turquoise stands above all other stones as sacred, representing healing, the sky, rain, and protection. Red coral carries life and energy, spiny oyster shell reflects the strength of the sea, and both jet and onyx bring meanings of purification, wisdom, and resilience.
Symbols and Motifs
Arrowheads signify protection, dragonflies symbolize transformation, and mountain motifs pay tribute to the four sacred peaks of the Navajo homeland. Small silver spheres are worked into the design as prayers for rain and abundance, while sun designs honor the life-giving presence of the Creator. Each of these symbols adds a layer of meaning, turning every bracelet into a wearable piece of Navajo history.
Buying and Styling Tips for Navajo Bracelets
To save yourself from purchasing or styling your bracelets incorrectly, follow these five tips:
- A genuine piece carries a stamp indicating .925 sterling, typically located on the inner band, and feels noticeably solid, never light or hollow, when held.
- Fit makes or breaks a cuff, so find one where the gap lets you slide it on while still sitting securely on the wrist.
- Natural turquoise has a distinct matrix pattern, so each piece looks organic and unique. Stones that look too manufactured likely have been.
- Detailed Navajo cuff bracelets almost always look best against a simple outfit since busy patterns compete rather than complement.
- Stacking a bold wilder cuff with lighter bands in different finishes creates contrast that feels considered and not overdone.
Shop Navajo Bracelets at SilverTQ
Navajo bracelets are valued for many reasons, including their genuine stones, handwrought details, and unique cultural heritage. At SilverTQ, you’ll find a collection that brings all of that together in bracelets that you’ll be mesmerized by every time you wear them. So why not check out our catalog and find your perfect bracelet?
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What is the significance of Navajo bracelets?
When you wear a Navajo bracelet, you carry generations of Navajo tradition, where every stamp and stone reflects spiritual protection, cultural pride, and a pursuit of balance and harmony.
Where did Navajo bracelets originate from?
The cultural exchange between Navajo chiefs and Mexican metalsmiths in the mid-1800s resulted in an explosion of silversmithing among Navajo artists. Over time, this evolved into the iconic turquoise-set style we recognize today.
Are these bracelets made by Navajo artists?
Yes, every piece comes from a skilled Navajo silversmith, with some featured artists being Alvin Yellowhorse, Tommy Jackson, Derrick Gordon, and Calvin Martinez, each stamping their hallmark inside the band so you know exactly who made it.
How can I tell if a Navajo bracelet is authentic?
Look for natural turquoise, a 925 sterling silver stamp, and the artist’s hallmark on the inside band. Plastic stones, overly perfect finishing, or a missing hallmark are clear signs of an inauthentic piece.
How do I measure my wrist size when buying a Navajo bracelet?
For a comfortable fit, wrap a flexible tape around the narrowest part of your wrist, then add half an inch.
Do you accept returns?
Yes, returns within 14 days receive a full refund, and within 30 days receive store credit, though PayPal orders incur an approximate 5% deduction. Items must be returned unaltered.
How should I care for a sterling silver and turquoise bracelet?
Put your bracelet on well after you’re done applying perfume or lotion, store it separately in a cool, dry place, and have any damage promptly examined by a professional.
What does turquoise symbolize in the Navajo culture?
Turquoise is sacred to the Navajo, representing protection, good health, and good fortune, with its blue-green tones reflecting the sky and water. It has been worn in ceremonies and gifted as a token of kinship for centuries.






































