A silyanka necklace handmade with interwoven glass beads and white metal. Traditionally worn as a choker, it often complemented other jewelry pieces. It could also be worn as a hair piece. This necklace originated in Podilia.
These are earrings made of gold and river pearls from a rich burial of a Sarmatian leader of the 1st century. This burial was found in 1984 in the mound village of Porogi, Vinnytsia region under the leadership of B.I. Lobai.
This oil folk painting on fabric by Jarmolenko Panas displays a young woman wearing a traditional “Vinok” flower crown. These crowns were worn by women of marital age to signify purity.
The artifact was made by V.F. Khomenko in Kyiv, Ukraine in 1977. It is made out of silver, agate, and enamel, and the exact purpose for production is unknown. The ring was featured in the exhibition "Rings: Thousand-Year Histories of Familiar Things", from September 24, 2019 to October 11, 2020 in the Museum of Historical Jewels of Ukraine.
A painting of a woman carrying water created in the style of Petrykivka, a traditional Ukrainian decorative painting style. The theme is related to a Ukrainian folk song, "Несе Галя воду" (Nese Halya vodu).