Browse Jewelry
Categories are how we group things. Search is how you find them. If you know what you're looking for, hit search. If you're browsing, pick one of these and dig in.
Every piece on StillSparkly is pre-loved (which is to say, used) and most are vintage. Each listing has real photos, honest condition notes, and a price set by the person who actually owns the piece.
Necklaces
Necklaces are the workhorses of any jewelry box. The right one finishes an outfit; the wrong one disappears into the neckline of your sweater and you spend the day tugging it out.
Jewelry Sets
Sets used to come in those velvet-lined boxes you'd actually keep on your dresser. A necklace, a bracelet, sometimes a pin or a pair of earrings (clip-ons, naturally), all designed to coordinate without matching too literally.
Bracelets
A bracelet is the piece you'll see on your own wrist all day, so it has to feel right. We have everything from delicate sterling chains you can stack three at a time to chunky vintage cuffs that take a stand on their own.
Brooches & Pins
Brooches are the most underrated category in jewelry. They go on collars, lapels, scarves, hats, the strap of a tote bag, anywhere you want a small visual exclamation point.
Earrings
Earrings are the easiest entry into vintage jewelry. They're small, they ship safely, and they let you experiment with eras and styles without committing to a statement piece.
Sterling Silver Jewelry
Sterling silver, real silver, .925 fineness, stamped or hallmarked, has been the workhorse precious metal for jewelry for centuries. It's hypoallergenic for most people, sturdy enough for daily wear, and develops a patina that some people love and some people polish off (no judgment either way).
Vintage Jewelry
Vintage jewelry is the whole reason this site exists. New jewelry is fine, but it doesn't have a story, and stories are part of why people wear jewelry in the first place.
Mid-Century Jewelry
Mid-century jewelry (roughly 1950 through 1970) is having a moment, and rightly so. The designers of this era weren't trying to look like anything that came before. You see clean shapes, unexpected materials (copper, lucite, enamel), and a willingness to be sculptural in a way earlier jewelry rarely was.