Western belt buckles blend utility, show
By Old Hoppy Jun 3, 2009 in Clothing and Fashion
Belt buckles are a relatively modern invention, and Western style or cowboy style belt buckles blended utility with the desire to show off or "fancy up" things and dress for going out on the town. The utility of a belt and buckle was that it plain and simply cinched up the pants, while offering a convenient place to tuck in a sidearm, or wear a holster. The showmanship or dress-up aspect came about as silversmiths and other metal workers found ways to shape, carve, and engrave pictures and symbols into the buckle, turning it into a fancy ornament, a piece of acceptably "manly" jewelry for cowboys and others in the Old West.
The history of Western belt buckles is a little vague. Some say the Mexican vaqueros (cowboys) started wearing fancy spurs and belts with fancy buckles to show off their sense of style and the wealth they had in silver. Others suggest Western buckles originally grew out of the various buttons and badges of rank in the military, before and after the days of the Old West.
Very likely, the usefulness of belts and buckles turned into the dress-up nature of Western buckles from combinations of all those social factors. Suspenders were widely used throughout most of the West -- but certainly belts and buckles were never shunned or ignored when they were available. It was only natural to fancy up and engrave precious and semi-precious metals in the process.
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