During the second half of the eighteenth century, jewelers and miniaturists began to weave or plait human hair for mounting into brooches, lockets, bracelets, and rings or to be inserted into the back of framed miniatures. As a reminder of a loved one, whether living or deceased, hair was a durable material that could be treated in a decorative manner.
Engraved inscriptions often indicate whether the piece was intended as mourning jewelry or as a token of love.
By the mid-nineteenth century, hair was also being woven into three-dimensional forms for mounting as earrings, charms, or watch chains.