Larry Taranoff Antique Heirloom Ring

sky355

Full Member
Jul 24, 2012
145
74
Littleton Colorado
Detector(s) used
Minelab Equinox 600
Fisher F22
Vibra tector 740
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Hi folks, Been a while since I posted. So I want to tell you about this ring I found. I could use some assistance in putting a value on it. I do plan to have it professionally cleaned and appraised at a local jeweler. Want to see what everyone here feels its worth.

So back in April 2017 wife and I spent 10 days in the VI. One day we went to a private property beach where you can pay to park and enjoy the beach. The island we were on some folks frowned upon metal detecting so we got to know the owners a bit then I brought up my hobby and asked if they care of I detected. Not a problem they said. I have one of those Vibra Tector 740 detector I picked on Ebay used. I was excited about putting this thing to work and it was an awesome tool for sifting through the shallows.

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after a few hours of detecting in the shallow water I had a hit and sifted it out of the sand. Pulled up this ring that was super tarnished. I showed the wife and we were mildly amused by the ring. To be completely honest we thought it was costume jewelry. It was pretty badly tarnished so I threw in my pouch and had a blast the rest of the day pulling up change and other stuff.

We get home and put the ring in my little bowl where I stick all my finds and there it sat till recently. Wife and I had conversations over the past few months about cleaning the ring up so we could investigate but we always spaced it out. The other night we broke out the ring and she has a silver and gold cleaner we keep in the bathroom. We started cleaning it up to get the tarnish and such off of it. You could tell this thing was in the water for a long time.
Well we where very surprised to see a green stone coming through.... ok not a huge deal but thats cool. Then we cleaned it up more and found it had what looked like an Opal. ok thats pretty cool. When we cleaned it up more we could see gold coming through and it was inlaid on a Silver band. Now I was intrigued but at first thought maybe it was just gold plated and that it had rubbed off in the ocean but no once we got this cleaned off we could tell there was no plating on this ring.

We started to clean the inside of the ring and started to make out an inscription. After about another 5-10 mins we could make out what it said with a good flashlight and a magnifying glass.

Inscription on the inside of the ring was

Larry Taranoff
Sitka 88

ok so we are thinking this must be the owner of the ring and they had their name put into it was a special date. I jump online and start putting in Larry's name and man was I shocked to learn that this was the jeweler who made the ring. After reading many posts about his work I researched more and learned that he had passed away back in 1994.
Larry was one of the first Tlingit Artists to inlay gold over Silver in his rings and bracelets also found that his work is heirloom quality stuff that gets passed down from generation to generation and Larry often put alaskan gold nuggets into his rings and designs.
I tried doing an image search for this particular style ring which is a fish made out of what appears to be a silver spoon handle and he has gold inlaid over the top of it. I could also see small gold nuggets in the fish tail and also his gill was a longer nugget that was flattened down. The eye is an emerald and the Opal is inlaid in a set in the tail part.

I was stoked so I started looking around and found a Jeweler up in Alaska who I sent an email to about the ring and what he could tell me about.

Email Sent: Hi there,

So this Larry Taranoff Ring was found on a beach under about 3 feet of water. We went on vacation in April and I had found the ring then but till recently it has sat in my drawer. WE finally decided to clean it up and on the back we saw the inscription Larry Taranoff Sitka 88 inscribed on the inside of the ring. We thought it was a person till we did a little research and found out he is the actual jeweler who made this piece back in 88. Here are some photos which are not the greatest but hopefully you can tell me more about the ring. Looks like Silver base with a lot of gold overlaid on it. Also has some gold nuggets in the taill and the front of the fish frame for its gills. From what we can tell its an opal and Emerald stones. Appreciate anything info you can provide.

the reply:

Wow-nice find! Larry was a very talented carver-he passed away quite a few years ago. People would bring him a silver spoon and pay him $100 to carve and shape it into a bracelet-obviously he did rings too, and gold overlay would certainly be more expensive. You should get a silver polishing cloth to clean off the rest of that oxidation. I’d estimate that that ring would be worth $1500-2k, but I’m not an expert appraiser.

I about fell out of my chair at this point. And to think I let this ring sit in my finds for 7 months before we started investigating it.

I looked online you can find Larry's work out there but it is super expensive and it appears he did more bracelets then rings. I am guessing based on me not finding any photos of this model that this was a 1 of a kind ring.

My next step is Im going have it professionally appraised and cleaned.

some photos for everyone.

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140$ Detector hit the jackpot on its first voyage with me. I am still in shock about this entire ordeal. To find something this nice. I couldn't ever imagine.

Let me know what you guys think.
 

califteacher

Full Member
Sep 30, 2012
162
232
Vista, San Diego County, CA
Detector(s) used
Minelab CTX3030 and Excalibur II
Primary Interest:
Beach & Shallow Water Hunting
Very interesting find! I can see why you thought it was just a junky ring at first. One of the neat things about this hobby is that it often requires research on historical sites or finds, or in this case, jewelry designers and artists. Due to your research, you are close to discovering the real value of a find that you had originally dismissed as junk or just a curiosity. Be sure to let us know the results.
 

OP
OP
sky355

sky355

Full Member
Jul 24, 2012
145
74
Littleton Colorado
Detector(s) used
Minelab Equinox 600
Fisher F22
Vibra tector 740
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Nice ring - thinking a toe ring? _ IMO

Nah its definitely a finger ring its pretty decent size. I believe made for a guy. It wouldn't fit the wife.

Yeah the Opal is as blue as the sea. Its gorgeous.
 

RustyGold

Gold Member
Aug 16, 2013
9,372
10,901
Southern California
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XP Deus I & II
Xterra Pro
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Congratulations on such an awesome find. It looks like handmade art. Thanks for the pics.
 

tamrock

Gold Member
Jan 16, 2013
14,942
29,780
Colorado
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That's a rare one of a kind find. Not sure what the value would be? Maybe send an inquiry to these folks who have some of these Taranoff pieces for sale?
Larry Taranoff's Jewelry for Sale
 

GoDeep

Bronze Member
Nov 12, 2016
2,120
4,515
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Looks to be gold nuggets inlaid into the silver too! Awesome, rare find indeed!
 

Aug 16, 2018
1
6
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Hello, I am Larry Taranoff's daughter and I can provide some information about the ring and about the artist. Your appraiser provided some erroneous information. Larry was not an Alaskan native. He was first generation Russian American. He tired once to make a bracelet from a silver spoon and discovered it was not actually possible without melting it down and there fore not worth the trouble. Gotta love wives tales and urban mythology don't you. He started making this style of jewelry around 1967, teaching himself how to do it. He started with just silver, then added gold, then abalone and later precious and semi precious gems.

The ring you found looks to be of the salmon pattern and is not one of a kind. If there is still writing on the inside of the ring you should find initials LPT and a date. If your ring is the first of the design there will also be a #1 there.
 

OP
OP
sky355

sky355

Full Member
Jul 24, 2012
145
74
Littleton Colorado
Detector(s) used
Minelab Equinox 600
Fisher F22
Vibra tector 740
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Hello, I am Larry Taranoff's daughter and I can provide some information about the ring and about the artist. Your appraiser provided some erroneous information. Larry was not an Alaskan native. He was first generation Russian American. He tired once to make a bracelet from a silver spoon and discovered it was not actually possible without melting it down and there fore not worth the trouble. Gotta love wives tales and urban mythology don't you. He started making this style of jewelry around 1967, teaching himself how to do it. He started with just silver, then added gold, then abalone and later precious and semi precious gems.

The ring you found looks to be of the salmon pattern and is not one of a kind. If there is still writing on the inside of the ring you should find initials LPT and a date. If your ring is the first of the design there will also be a #1 there.

Shelly,

Thank you for jumping on here and replying. I haven't been on much so just seeing your post here. I was the one that sent you the facebook message and we chatted. =)
 

Jyorsky

Sr. Member
Sep 23, 2012
291
221
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MXT PRO
AT GOLD
ACE 250
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Follow up question......are these rings available on a secondary market.......and what would the value be?.

Shelly......would you have any idea?
 

OP
OP
sky355

sky355

Full Member
Jul 24, 2012
145
74
Littleton Colorado
Detector(s) used
Minelab Equinox 600
Fisher F22
Vibra tector 740
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Follow up question......are these rings available on a secondary market.......and what would the value be?.

Shelly......would you have any idea?

Would love to hear the answer to this as well. I have found many bracelets made by Larry but not any rings. Leads me to believe that his rings are not traded or sold all that often.
 

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