Based on the style and what similar engraved western saddle silver pieces sell for. High-end handmade sterling saddle sets can be worth substantially more. For your set specifically, if it is. Sterling silver overlay on steel/iron.
A recognized maker or custom engraved set could push higher. The engraved floral pattern and hand-cut work do make it look nicer than cheap modern plated sets. A few things you can check. Look on the backs for stamps like "STERLING, " "925, " "ALPACA, " or maker initials. Strong magnetic pull = likely overlay/plated on steel.
Little/no pull = possibly sterling. Weigh the pieces if possible. If you upload a photo of the backs/stamps, I can narrow the value down much more accurately. There are no markings and a magnet does not work on it. If a magnet does not stick and there are no obvious plated spots showing through, there's a decent chance these are either.
Sterling silver overlay on copper/brass. A lot of older western saddle silver from Mexico and small custom makers was never clearly marked, especially handmade pieces from the 1960s-1980s. The engraving style on yours looks legitimately hand engraved rather than cheap stamped import hardware. Based on the size, matching set, and current market for vintage western saddle silver.Silver overlay or nickel silver. If tied to a known maker or high-end saddle brand: potentially more. Your set appears to include.
1 larger back plate or keeper. That looks like a partial saddle silver set rather than random loose pieces, which helps the value. The fastest way to know for sure. Take one piece to a jeweler or pawn shop for an acid/XRF test. Ask specifically whether it is.
If it comes back sterling, the engraving alone makes it more collectible than simple melt value.