Northwest Coast Style Bentwood Box Ring

02.02.2011 · Posted in Janet Walker

Northwest Coast Bentwood Box RingOur Sterling Silver Northwest Box Ring was designed to symbolize floating Carved Bentwood Cedar Box full of dried Salmon or precious items swept into the river during a flood.

Northwest Indian Hand Carved CEDAR BOXES were originally created to store precious items. We all have different techniques to keep our precious supplies and food storage. The natives of the Northwest Coast have for centuries used hand carved cedar boxes; some are carved and painted with intricate family crests or designs of significance and some are painted or plain.

Northwest Coast Bentwood Box

Northwest Coast Bentwood Box

Decorated boxes were very important items, but no matter how intricate or decorated the box, it can never be as important as the supplies it contains – often food or family/clan regalia. The food storage would mean physical survival of course, but the regalia meant you were connected to people who loved you and whom you wanted in your life and defined who you are, thus emotional survival.

The Stonington Gallery in Seattle, WA had a show with the theme “Carved Boxes” and as metal smiths we came at it from that direction. My passion for Lost Wax Cast Sculptural Rings made my dreams of carved boxes just jump with ideas.

Northwest Coast Bentwood Box Ring

Northwest Coast Bentwood Box Ring

We had been experiencing a lot of rain living in the Great North Wet and flood is always a possibility. We live on an old village site on a peninsula and we have to cross the Nooksack River to get to our home and Studio. I had been reading about Universal Flood Myths when the Gallery invitation came so it just fell into place. The Old Spirits of the Northwest and the trials they lived through just came to mind and the Bentwood Box ring was birthed.

This beautiful carved bentwood box, maybe half full of dried Salmon, floating down the river, got away from the people in the flood that took out the village. Now it could be the Nass River, or the Frazier, or the Skykomish at flood stage, bringing a big mess and taking the carefully wind dried precious lot of Salmon… Another name for this ring is Tschmous, meaning living snag, i.e. sunken log. We created this ring in response to a challenge to create a representation of a carved bentwood box… We imagined a village after a flood with a box of dried salmon floating downstream, waterlogged, with only one carved corner sticking up, floating by waiting to be found. Whoever can see and then catch it will be a hero to the people, physically and emotionally.

Northwest Coast Bentwood Box RingThe Box Ring, # 307, is a substantial sculptural carving; 9mm high, 18mm wide, very 3-D, tapering to 5mm squared shank. The hollowed underside and squared shank create a well-balanced, comfortable ring.
Available in sizes 6 to 15.

2 Responses to “Northwest Coast Style Bentwood Box Ring”

  1. Ingrid Hansen says:

    How much is your bentwood box ring?

    • Janet Walker says:

      Hi Ingrid,

      Thanks for admiring our Bentwood Box ring! I love this ring! We made it originally for a show at the Stonington Gallery in Seattle on Bentwood Boxes and it was so fun to design, make and put that ring in the show with all those wood carvers who had made cedar boxes! We made them look!! It’s been a popular ring! It is a marvelously comfortable ring at 16mm wide, 10mm high and with a heavy squared shank. It has really great balance in whatever metal. We’ve made it in gold and sterling. The Sterling Bentwood Box ring sells for $ 175 up to size 15 where the price changes to $ 195. Shipping is free anywhere in the USA. Thanks again for asking!

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