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  2. Kuwaiti chest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuwaiti_chest

    A Kuwaiti chest is a large wooden chest, usually having been made in India, and covered in various brass studs and designs.

  3. Hope chest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hope_chest

    This dowry chest was often richly decorated, however over time dowry chests gradually became smaller, with jewelry boxes emerging instead of large dowry boxes. [ 4 ] By contrast, a "bridal chest" was given to a bride at her wedding by her husband, and so is not a "hope chest" in this regard.

  4. Olinalá (craftwork) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olinalá_(craftwork)

    Although the most popular product is olinalá boxes and trunks, this artisan technique can also be applied to trays, fruit bowls, reliquaries, jewelry boxes, folding screens, headboards for the bed, seats, frames for mirrors and paintings, lecterns, breadboxes or tecomates (calabash bowls). [1] [3]

  5. Jewellery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewellery

    Large stones were frequently set in box-bezels on enamelled rings. [53] Notable among merchants of the period was Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, who brought the precursor stone of the Hope Diamond to France in the 1660s. When Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned as Emperor of the French in 1804, he revived the style and grandeur of jewellery and fashion in ...

  6. Magatama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magatama

    In 2003, the excavation of a large Yayoi period settlement in Tawaramoto, Nara also revealed two large jade magatama, one 4.64 centimetres (1.83 in), the second 3.63 centimetres (1.43 in) in length. The larger Tawaramoto magatama is the 10th-largest example found to date in Japan.

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