Belts and Buckles

Inspired by the intricate dogs illuminations found in the ninth century Book of Kells (also known as the Book of Columba or Iona). Hounds appeared throughout the legends of the pan-Gaelic culture of Highland Scotland and Ireland, such as the story of the 'Hound of Ulster'. The Scottish Deerhound and..
$35.00
Celtic Crosses were distinguished by their ‘nimbus’, a surrounding ring and were found throughout early medieval Christian Britain, primarily those parts influenced by ‘Celtic Christianity’: Ireland, Scotland, Northumbria, Wales, Cornwall and the West Country.Finest quality traditional Belt Buckle i..
$35.00
Kelpies are shape-shifting water spirits that are said to inhabit the lochs, rivers and burns of Scotland. They usually take the form of horses. Almost every body of water in the kingdom has stories associated with this mysterious, majestic, and sometimes menacing sprite.Finest quality traditional B..
$35.00
The design for this brooch is derived from a famous seventh-century Pictish carved stone that can be found in Inverurie Kirkyard, Aberdeenshire.Finest quality traditional Belt Buckle in chrome plated brass. Made to take a 2 1/4" belt, which can be purchased separately.The chrome finish option gives ..
$35.00
The ancient and mysterious Triskell is one of the oldest decorative symbols known to man. A symbol of eternity and trinity, it first appears in the Atlantic Isles, in 3200BC at Newgrange, County Meath, in Ireland, and later became a favoured motif of the pan-Gaelic culture of Ireland and Highland Sc..
$35.00
The intricate interlaced knotwork patterns found throughout the culturally Celtic parts of early medieval Britain, represented eternity and the twisting threads of fate. Finest quality traditional Belt Buckle in chrome plated brass. Made to take a 2 1/4" belt, which can be purchased separately.The c..
$35.00
An Irish Harp surrounded in a traditional Claddagh motif. The harp was a pan-Gaelic and Brythonic symbol, familiar in Ireland, Highland Scotland, Wales and Brittany, In Gaelic Scotland and Ireland, the-wire stringed instrument was the courtly instrument favoured by chiefs, before the popularisation ..
$35.00
The thistle has been a national symbol of Scotland since at least the time of James III. As the Renaissance took hold of Scotland, the thistle became an important decorative motif throughout the country, coming to represent the picturesque and hardy qualities of the Scottish landscape and people. F..
$35.00