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PEOPLE | CULTURE | HAPPENINGS | TRENDS beachbites Sweetheart Shell Samplers Sailors’ Valentine By CAROLINE HOOD he stuff of legend, sailors who spent years away from their wives and sweethearts at sea spent hours crafting intricate, geometric designs made from colorful shells with messages like, “Forget Me Not” or “Think of Me When Far Away.” But sailors’ valentines, as they are known, were neither made by sailors nor were they valentines, says Constance Miller, who co-authored the book, Sailors’ Valentines: Their Journey Through Time. Miller, a frequent exhibitor of sailors’ valentines during the North Carolina Shell Club show each September, says the shell craft was first developed in Europe during the Victorian period when sailors would bring exotic shells, from their travels around the world, home to their wives. “Ladies began making shell plaques with rectangular designs and somewhere along the way the shape became octagonal, perhaps for more geometric possibilities,” Miller says. When B.H. and George Belgrave emigrated from England to Barbados in the 1830s, they started a cottage industry of employing local women to make the valentines. Sailors in port for fresh water for their journeys to England or up the East Coast of the United States would buy them in gift shops and bring them home for their wives or sweethearts. The valentines were contained in a wooden octagonal shadow box, ranging from eight to 14 inches across. Small, colorful shells were glued to cotton in intricate patterns to the back of the box. “Almost all the antique ones had a compass rose format, containing hearts, flowers, and a sentiment,” Miller says. The art form has experienced a resurgence in popularity since the 1940s and 1950s. Shell crafters spend hundreds of hours creating sailors’ valentines that are displayed at shell shows and art galleries up and down the East Coast. Miller, from Delaware, and Jane Santini, also a sailors’ valentine artist, “A Proposal from Your Sailor at Sea,” an all-white double Valentine, has a ring in the left hand side, and was created by Constance Marshall Miller in 2003. 12 WBM february 2014 COURTESY OF CONSTANCE MARSHALL MILLER T


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