If you tire, like we do, of seeing gimpy, overpriced, often bling-type non-traditional Native American jewelry (sometimes of questionable origin, IMHO)—and often paraded erroneously as "vintage," then we are with 'ya. It didn't used to be that way. Maybe it's the advent of the internet. Maybe some simply don't know any better. But we do and we are gonna' keep endeavoring to present our customers with quality Native jewelry at reasonable prices. BTW, prices at the sources are getting out of hand lately! The cuff above is really nice. Thirty or forty years ago it would be par for the course—a little above average. Now it's a standout. Either way, anybody should be proud to wear this substantial, well-made, sharp-looking cuff made by a well-known Navajo artisan. But you need to have a wrist size—measured around the wrist bone—of about 7-inches (which is the inside circumference—including the 'gap'). You can fudge an eighth-inch either way, but no more. Bending cuffs with lots of settings is fraught with error—don't do it. Just buy it to fit, please. It is .75-inches wide throughout, with 14 beautiful, greenish-hued Kingman turquoise stones, interspersed with contrasting copper matrix. The Sterling is finished in a satiny, old-style patina. Weight is 78-grams, or 2.8-ounces. Hallmarked "Charles Johnson" in cursive font. Complimentary USPS tracked Priority shipping. Nice.