This prime example from a museum in the Northeast shows us a fine Navajo-made squash blossom necklace using American currency (silver dollars) for ornamentation. The earlier generations of Native smiths used U.S. and Mexican coins for their metal until this practice was firmly banned by the federal govenment in mid-century. Beautiful necklaces were crafted between the 1920s and 1950s and became enjoyable souvenirs to be brought back home and worn for their amusement value. Yet these pieces are also fine examples of Native exploration with design. Humor has to be an underlying impulse: Indians would grow to understand that such currency was essential for living in the modern world.