Postby dragonflywink » Tue Jul 24, 2018 3:55 pm
Suspect you would have a hard time finding a silversmith, Navajo or otherwise, who "turned and folded a silver ingot over and over again" while pounding out a spoon or any other item - that just isn't the way it's done. The flaws seen in hand-wrought Navajo silver can be caused by working too cold, resulting in cracks, or an improperly poured ingot can have air bubbles exposed when hammering or rolling, and overheating during annealing can cause brittleness, splitting, changes in color and texture, even melting. To date a piece by flaws in workmanship doesn't seem realistic to me, there are numerous (would guess the majority) early Navajo pieces without those flaws, likely done by more experienced and/or skilled smiths, and there are also numerous later hand-wrought pieces that show considerable flaws - I have a Navajo chip-inlay buckle that would date no earlier than the late 1960s-early '70s, and it shows all sorts of flaws on the reverse. Most of my books are packed away and Kline's 'Navajo Spoons' is the only one handy at the moment, but I do have a couple of others, and am sure that Adair's 'Navajo and Pueblo Silversmiths', an older text-heavy book, describes their process of hammering silver pieces in detail.
~Cheryl