Long before a birth certificate proved a child’s name, Scottish mothers trusted something older: a small silver brooch, shaped like two hearts joined beneath a crown, pinned to a newborn’s blanket within hours of arrival.
This was the Luckenbooth brooch — and for centuries, it carried a weight no piece of paper could match.

Where the Name Comes From
The name “Luckenbooth” comes from the locked booths — small, shuttered shops that once lined the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, clustered near St Giles’ Cathedral. Silversmiths and jewellers traded from these booths as far back as the sixteenth century, and the brooches they made became one of Scotland’s most distinctive love tokens.
A young man would buy a Luckenbooth brooch and give it to his sweetheart as a pledge of devotion. If she accepted, the brooch sealed their intentions more firmly than words alone. Mary, Queen of Scots is said to have given one to Lord Darnley — two intertwined hearts beneath a crown — making the symbol forever associated with Scottish romance.
From Love Token to Infant Protector
But the brooch did not stay as a symbol of courtship alone. Once a child was born, the same brooch was pinned to the baby’s shawl or blanket — and this is where the tradition took on a deeper significance.
In a Scotland where infant mortality was common and superstition ran alongside faith, the Luckenbooth brooch was believed to ward off the evil eye and protect a newborn from harm. Mothers trusted that the silver and the symbol of joined hearts would keep their child safe through the most vulnerable days of life.
Some families passed the same brooch through generations — grandmother to mother to daughter — each pinning it to a new child’s blanket on the first day. The brooch became part of the family story, carrying the memory of every child it had watched over.
The Design and Its Meaning
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The classic Luckenbooth features two hearts, sometimes intertwined, sometimes stacked, always topped by a crown. The hearts represent love between partners, while the crown is thought to honour Mary, Queen of Scots — or, in some interpretations, to invoke divine protection.
Some brooches are simple and small. Others are intricately worked with thistle motifs, Celtic knotwork, or initials engraved on the reverse. The finest examples, made by Edinburgh silversmiths in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, are now museum pieces — but the design has never gone out of production.
Why the Tradition Endured
Scotland industrialised, modernised, and left behind many of its old customs. But the Luckenbooth brooch survived — partly because it was beautiful, partly because it carried real emotion, and partly because Scottish families never quite stopped believing in its power to protect.
Today, Luckenbooth brooches are still given at weddings, christenings, and births across Scotland. They appear in jewellery shops on the Royal Mile — not far from where the original locked booths once stood. And in many families, the tradition of pinning a Luckenbooth to a newborn’s blanket continues, connecting a twenty-first-century child to a custom that stretches back five hundred years.
It is a small thing — a silver brooch, no larger than a thumbnail. But in Scotland, small things have always carried the greatest weight.
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