Friday, January 13, 2012

A Quick Look at Jewelry Hallmarks

!±8± A Quick Look at Jewelry Hallmarks

British Hallmarks are the best in the world.

Who says so, the rest of the World. Although to be fair, other countries have great hallmarks too, it is just that they are Not so often seen.

A book on World Hallmarks for Gold or Silver items is a must for any serious accumulator or dealer, but they can be a dinky intimidating and time consuming. Is that mark a Cockerel or a Tree? Could it be made in Switzerland or Germany?

Thankfully for the rest of us, a small pocket book on Uk Hallmarks is more than up to the task, coupled with that very useful plastic 10X eyeglass I keep on hinting for you to buy.

It will show you that the item has been tested and stamped, to prove it is - what it says it is (9ct or 18ct etc).

British Jewelry with a full Ukhm (United Kingdom Hall Mark) is generally clearly stamped and readable after you clean it (check the website below for another complimentary narrative on 'How to Clean your Jewelry at Home').

Once you are aware of the marks, you will always feel just that dinky bit good when you buy that 'Could it be an Antique?' item at the local market, or from the guy in the Pub that every person talks about but nobody knows.

Buyer Beware....

*Six marks on British Jewelry.*

Yes... Six?

# 1: The Maker's Mark (Usually some initials). Not all that foremost for everyday items, unless you want to obtain Jewelry from one maker. Silver collectors may want to buy items from say, Bateman (I should be so lucky).

# 2: The second stamp is the Assay Office mark or 'Mark of Origin'. It tells you where the item came from. The most coarse is the London Hallmark. A Leopard's Head. Sometimes this has a crown on the Leopard's Head (until circa 1821). Modern items do
Not have a crown on the Leopard Stamp.

The other most coarse Assay Office marks are from Birmingham (an Anchor). Once there were many Assay offices colse to Great Britain and Ireland, the Chester mark for instance. Now there are just three offices left in England, Sheffield being the last using a 'Rose' on gold Jewelry (Do Not Confuse This With 'Rose Gold' Jewelry) as that is a color, not a mark.

In Scotland there is Edinburgh, while in Ireland there is Dublin. Pity the poor Welsh are left out again!

# 3: The next is the Assay potential mark and is shown as the 'Lion Passant' (which means 'looking ahead') and is a certify of quality. This was later changed to a 'Crown' mark with a stamp showing the potential of Gold.... 9ct or 18ct etc.

# 4: Finally, and perhaps the most foremost mark, was the Date letter mark. It changed each year so we can tell when the item was made.

Occasionally there is an extra mark.

# 5: An example was the Queen's Silver Jubilee in 1977.

Suffice to say if you see a Brooch with four or five marks and one of them is an Anchor with an 18 next to it and a letter 'C' next to that.... It's a safe bet it was made in Birmingham in 1927, or was that 1952, or 1902, or, or, or.....

Buyer Beware the man in the Pub.

As with most Jewelry items though, our suggest has always been to buy the best potential you can afford from a reputable dealer who will certify it.

Other than that, your plastic 10X eyeglass sure helps a lot....

P.S.

If you administer a website or issue an ezine, please feel free to use this narrative as long as you leave all links in place, do not modify the content and include our resource box as listed below. Although it's Not compulsory I would personally appreciate it if you could send me an email at: gemmo1@online-jewelry-appraisals.com to let me know if and where you used it. If you need other great content - complimentary of policy - then drop me a line at the email address given - 'cause I've got potential content and Gallons of the stuff....

(c)David Foard - All rights reserved


A Quick Look at Jewelry Hallmarks

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