[{"id":353361395879,"handle":"inkybay-all","title":"Collection all for Inkybay","updated_at":"2026-02-24T05:01:26-07:00","body_html":"","published_at":"2025-12-09T16:54:22-07:00","sort_order":"manual","template_suffix":"","disjunctive":false,"rules":[{"column":"type","relation":"not_equals","condition":"PD Custom Product"}],"published_scope":"web","image":{"created_at":"2025-12-09T16:21:29-07:00","alt":null,"width":300,"height":450,"src":"\/\/lumieregraphics.com\/cdn\/shop\/collections\/collection-custom-thmb.jpg?v=1765322489"}},{"id":353717584039,"handle":"indigenous","updated_at":"2026-02-17T22:13:45-07:00","published_at":"2025-12-08T08:35:54-07:00","sort_order":"manual","template_suffix":null,"published_scope":"web","title":"Indigenous","body_html":null,"image":{"created_at":"2025-12-10T12:01:55-07:00","alt":null,"width":300,"height":450,"src":"\/\/lumieregraphics.com\/cdn\/shop\/collections\/collection-indigenous-thmb.jpg?v=1765393315"}}]
A Navajo silversmith is stamping silver conchos on an anvil, which were probably linked into sterling concho belts. The belts were worn for daily or ceremonial use then and are still popular today. Silversmithing is a traditional Navajo art form, passed from generation to generation. Photographed ca. 1920 by William M. Pennington.
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