White Buffalo stone surrounded with traditional twisted wire, hand-stamped designs, sterling silver drops, and oxidized sterling accents. Handmade by Diné silversmith Randall Enditto.
STAMP WORK Navajo silversmiths are renowned for their intricate, detailed stamp work, a style developed over many generations. Stamping is done by hand, and the stamps themselves are oftentimes unique to the artist or are handed down from generations of silversmiths.
WHITE BUFFALO The trade name “White Buffalo” is used to identify this beautiful stone coming out of Tonopah, Nevada. The Otteson mining family owns the mine where the white stone grows, surrounded by black chert which creates beautiful patterns, and sometimes in rare and more expensive pieces, a spider-web matrix. The stone grows in veins, is hard, and cuts like turquoise, but is not technically turquoise, and is generally referred to as “White Buffalo”.
Randall Endito grew up in a family of silversmiths and learned his art from his parents. Born in Gallup, January 1, 1980, to the Tangle Water into Bitterwater Clan, Randall continues to live and work in New Mexico. His clean lines and detailed stamp and scroll work give him a unique style that delights his collectors in the Southwest.
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