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  2. Silver hallmarks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_hallmarks

    The old hallmarks were as unique as today's logos, and disputes often arose when one company copied another's stamp. [citation needed] "The words "silver" and "sterling silver" describe a product that contains 92.5% pure silver. Silver products sometimes may be marked 925, which means that 925 parts per thousand are pure silver.

  3. Hallmark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallmark

    Hallmarks are often confused with "trademarks" or "maker's marks". A hallmark is not the mark of a manufacturer to distinguish their products from other manufacturers' products: that is the function of trademarks or makers' marks. To be a true hallmark, it must be the guarantee of an independent body or authority that the contents are as marked.

  4. Dublin Assay Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dublin_Assay_Office

    Initially, hallmarks consisted of the goldsmiths' proper mark which was the maker's mark originally used to identify the silversmith or goldsmith responsible for making the article. The fineness mark, the crowned harp, was applied to 22 carat gold and sterling silver, which was silver of a standard of 925 parts of fine silver in each 1,000.

  5. Fabergé workmaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabergé_workmaster

    Fabergé workmaster. A Fabergé workmaster was a skilled craftsman who owned his own workshop and produced jewelry, silver or objets d'art for the House of Fabergé. When Carl Fabergé took over the running of the business in 1882, its output increased so rapidly that the two Fabergé brothers could not manage all the workshops themselves.

  6. The Goldsmiths' Company Assay Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Goldsmiths'_Company...

    The four wardens of the Goldsmiths’ Company were tasked with visiting workshops in the City of London to assay (test) silver articles. If these articles were found to be below standard they were originally forfeit to the king, but if they passed, each article received the king's mark of authentication which was the mark of a leopard's head.

  7. Mark (sign) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_(sign)

    Mark (sign) Multiple marks on silver, left to right: maker's mark (Paul Storr), lion passant (assay mark for sterling silver), London town mark, date letter (1835), duty mark (William IV) A mark is a written or imprinted symbol used to indicate some trait of an item, for example, its ownership or maker. [1][2] Mark usually consists of letters ...

  8. Gilbert Marks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Marks

    1 April 1861. Croydon. Died. 5 February 1905 (aged 43) Occupation. Silversmith. Style. Arts and Crafts movement. Gilbert Leigh Marks (1 April 1861 – 5 February 1905) was an English silversmith, who worked in the Arts and Crafts style, during a career of little over ten years.

  9. Sheffield Assay Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheffield_Assay_Office

    Originally, only silver produced within twenty miles of Sheffield could be marked at the office. From 1784, Sheffield was empowered to keep a register of all maker's marks within one hundred miles, including those of Birmingham. Sheffield Assay Office, October 2008. In 1795, after several moves, an office was established on Fargate. In 1880 it ...

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