Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider
Victorian Chatelaine Slider

Victorian Chatelaine Slider

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Our Antique Chatelaine Necklaces are…extraordinary. Made from authentic, late-Victorian lorgnette chains, each is a true antique, crafted in high-quality gold-fill (the standard for strength and everyday wear in the 1800’s), and retains their original functioning slide and their original dog clip - the very same clip Victorian women used to fasten glasses, scissors, tiny pencils, or lockets.

The sliders on these pieces are stunning -  some have starbursts, genuine opals, seed pearls, tiny garnets  - no two are alike.

Thanks to the expert eye of Kat of Stone Cooper (and her way with antiques), the sliders adjust smoothly, exactly as they did 140 years ago. The dog clip remains fully functional, and these necklaces are impossibly cool, full of history, and wildly unique.

I’ve been wearing mine almost daily(!!) - with everything from t-shirts to slinky camis. Incredibly wearable, these pieces can be adjusted to fit virtually any neckline, and they also layer really well with other necklaces. I cannot overstate how incredibly special these pieces really are.

Read more about each necklace below.

Notes

Made from authentic, late-Victorian lorgnette chains

Antique, high-quality gold-fill (standard of the 1800s)

Original functioning slide and original dog clip

Vintage deadstock brass clasp

Embellishments may include: starbursts, quatrefoils, seed pearls, garnet, opal

A diamond-shaped slider set with four opals. This diagonal “stripe” was a Victorian favorite - sometimes symbolic of heraldry. The opposing triangles are decorated with engraved fleur-style scrolls - all hand-cut. In the Victorian era, opals symbolize love, hope, purity, and fidelity.

A Victorian fan-shaped slider with soft green-gold enamel (“basse-taille”), hand-engraved detailing, and a tiny seed pearl at its center symbolizing purity, hope and new beginnings. Enamel fan motifs were inspired by Japanese design trends that swept through Victorian fashion after 1870.

A four-point Victorian star slider set with a central opalescent cabochon (meant to represent hope) surrounded by four tiny seed pearls, one on each point (usually symbolizing purity or constancy). The star features hand-engraved ray detailing around the center stone, a classic late-1800s touch meant to mimic starlight. 

A Victorian lozenge-shaped slider with four genuine opals (you can see the flashes of pink, green, and blue), arranged in a grid, with hand-cut engraving around the perimeter. Opal was considered incredibly romantic and talismanic in the 1800s - thought to bring luck, intuition, and “second sight.” Opal sliders are less common than seed pearl versions - especially one with four opals - making this piece an especially rare find.

A shield-shaped slider set with one tiny opal (with flashes of blue and green) and two aged seed pearls (symbolizing hope, constancy), all framed by hand-engraved detailing. Shield/leaf shapes like this were symbolic of protection and good fortune.

An eight-pointed star (sometimes called a “compass star” or “guiding star”) with two tiny gemstones - a garnet and a paste diamond (clear). These mixed stones in star motifs were a thing back then - one symbolized “bright day,” the other “night star.” There’s also classic Victorian burst engraving around each stone - this was hand-done and meant to mimic rays of light.

A shield-shaped slider engraved with a radiating starburst, centered with a single seed pearl. The starburst engraving is hand-cut (you can see the tiny, slightly irregular rays), meant to mimic light radiating from the center stone. This trio - a shield, a starburst, a seed pearl - is basically a Victorian-era good-luck charm.

A slider with a diagonal “belt” motif - a design borrowed from heraldic straps and shields of the era. The center stripe is set with three stones: two original seed pearls (a classic Victorian choice symbolizing purity and wisdom) flanking a darker central stone, likely a garnet or paste “jet”. Pearl + dark stone trios often represented “light and shadow” -  a favorite Victorian metaphor for life’s balance.The raised, folded edges of the metal mimic a wrapped sash or banner.

I| The Twin Pearl Slider
A delicate diamond-shaped (lozenge) slider featuring two tiny seed pearls set into a hand-engraved gold-fill frame. This classic Victorian design balances geometric simplicity with symbolic meaning - seed pearls were often chosen to represent purity and sentiment, making this a quietly romantic piece full of history and charm.

A late-Victorian “shield” slider engraved with one of the period’s most beloved pairings: the crescent moon and eight-point star. At the center sits a single seed pearl - the Victorians' go-to gem for celestial motifs, symbolizing purity, protection, and a steady guiding light. The starburst around the pearl is hand-cut (you can see the tiny irregularities that prove it), and the crescent moon is engraved in relief, giving the whole piece a celestial-romantic vibe. Moon-and-star sliders in this shielded silhouette are much harder to find than floral or geometric versions, which makes this one pretty special.

More About...

Stone Cooper

At Stone Cooper, jewelry is a method of storytelling. Designer & Owner Katherine (Kat) Sliclen creates pieces that are sustainably and ethically-sourced, specializing in antique and vintage deadstock parts. With a background in metal smithing, Kat hunts through secret warehouses for hours (days?) on end, picking through bead by bead, link by link to find the perfect pieces to repurpose into her own designs. The result is nostalgic jewelry that manages to feel modern & truly unique.