To receive a hallmark items of
precious metal must undergo tests carried out by the assay office. This is done
to ascertain if the object's content of precious metal meets the standard
requirements of purity.
Forms of marking precious metal objects were around from the
Byzantine period in the early part of the first millennium A.D. However, it was
under the rule of king Edward I of
The term hallmark comes from mark of the hall of goldsmiths
in
Before items made of precious metals such as silver, gold or
platinum are stamped with an assay's hallmark they undergo rigorous testing to
prove whether or not the metal purity measures up to the established standards.
In fact, the word assay is derived from the French word meaning to test, trail
or examine.
The basic method of assaying, also known as the cupellation process, was first introduced by the ancient Egyptians. The process starts when a small sample of silver is removed from the object of silver jewelry to be tested, which is then carefully weighed and measured. The sample of silver is then placed in a cupel, a small receptacle made of bone ash, along with a small quantity of lead. This is then placed in a furnace and heated to a high temperature with a draught of air flowing over it. The lead and any other base metals contained in the silver sample are either oxidized or absorbed into the cupel, leaving only the pure silver behind.
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The remains of the silver are then weighed and measured and
compared to the initial weight of the sample. The cupellation process is the
most accurate method for determining metal purity and is the standard technique
practiced today. Upon meeting the required standards of sterling silver the
item of sterling is stamped with the appropriate hallmark.
Until quite recently, most hallmarks were struck using steel
punches. The punches are produced in various proportions, appropriate for
petite pieces of sterling silver jewelry to hefty items of silver ware. Punches
are made in straight shanks for normal punching with a hammer, or ring shanks
used with a press to mark rings.
The trouble with traditional punching is that the procedure
can misshape the form of the jewelry, resulting in the article having to be
reworked after hallmarking is completed. For this reason, unfinished items of
jewelry are often sent to the assay office where cuts-offs are taken and tested
from the articles before hallmarking is executed.
Today, a new method of marking is being employed using laser
technology, which burns the hallmark on to the jewelry, something which is
especially valuable for delicate items which would otherwise be damaged by the
traditional technique of punching. This procedure of hallmarking uses high
power lasers to dissolve material from the metal surface. There are two methods
of laser marking, 2D and 3D. Two-dimensional marking burns the outline of the
hallmarks into the object, while three-dimensional marking simulates the
traditional punching.
Often the hallmark is made up of several elements including:
the type of metal, the maker and the year of the marking. In 1999 a new format
of English hallmarking on objects of sterling silver was initiated consisting
of a maker's mark, the assay office insignia and a 925 symbol. Optional extra
marks are the Lion Passant, the
The standardizing of the date letter sequence, shared by all
four remaining assay offices in Birmingham, Edinburgh, London and Sheffield,
were introduced to bring the UK system closer in line with other European Union
standards. However, the problem remains that many countries throughout the
world have different standards and specifications that vary considerably,
making it difficult for one country to accept another's hallmarking as
equivalent to its own.
With the advent of globalization, free trade and the
Internet, finding the problematic solution to the standardization of world
hallmarking has become increasingly important. In 1972, the EFTA (European Fair
Trade Association) consisting of Austria, Finland, Norway, Portugal, Sweden,
Switzerland and the United Kingdom held the Vienna Convention, where the first
European hallmarking laws for precious metals were put into force.
The convention enables specially designated assay offices
throughout member countries of the EFTA to apply, after testing, a common
control mark to articles of precious metals including sterling silver in
accordance with the Convention. The articles bearing the Convention marks,
called CCM: Common Control Marks, are accepted without further testing or
marking by the assay office of any destination country that is an EFTA member.
Although this system is not worldwide as yet,
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