Found this brooch at a jeweler in Salt lake City, Utah. The appraisal that accompanied the brooch indicates that is arts and crafts period circa 1900, is sterling, has four colors of enamel, and that the stone is a 17.3mm amethyst. In sunlight the violet or purple enamel is actually blue. If possible I'd like to confirm the date and learn who the maker is. The mark "R.B s" does not appear on the any of the 925-1000.com lists - at least I was unable to find them.
Here is the brooch:
and the hallmarks on the reverse:
Seeking info on the date and maker of this brooch
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This one does seem a little strange, the date punch for 1893 is shown in all the guides I have checked so far as being in a oval punch, and although it appears to be well struck it does not match well, also I would have expected the anchor to be in the upright position, but I am not sure if this was a hard and fast rule, regards Trev.
Hi,
I've had a variety of Birmingham pieces from this time period with the marks ordered and oriented in different ways, so the order and orientation of these do not strike me as odd. However, there are a number of other things that seem strange to me.
Firstly, the letter seems a better match for the "L" of 85/86, the light highlight down the right side of it indicates no break for the stubby crossbar of the "T". The cartouche shape is wrong and it should have a duty mark if 85/86, nonetheless I still think it is the "L".
The lion seems a bit strange with his nodding head, looks a bit like a ram getting ready to butt something.
Oddest of all is the use of a chipped punch for the town mark, with not one, but two chips out. I've seen this on American pseudomarks and, on a few rare occasions, with British maker's marks, but never have I seen it on any stamp out of an assay office.
Could it be a set of duty dodging stamps?
Regards
I've had a variety of Birmingham pieces from this time period with the marks ordered and oriented in different ways, so the order and orientation of these do not strike me as odd. However, there are a number of other things that seem strange to me.
Firstly, the letter seems a better match for the "L" of 85/86, the light highlight down the right side of it indicates no break for the stubby crossbar of the "T". The cartouche shape is wrong and it should have a duty mark if 85/86, nonetheless I still think it is the "L".
The lion seems a bit strange with his nodding head, looks a bit like a ram getting ready to butt something.
Oddest of all is the use of a chipped punch for the town mark, with not one, but two chips out. I've seen this on American pseudomarks and, on a few rare occasions, with British maker's marks, but never have I seen it on any stamp out of an assay office.
Could it be a set of duty dodging stamps?
Regards
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I couldn't put my hand on heart but they look like fake marks to me. The punches have no detail and aren't convincing. Just an opinion of course, but I wouldn't buy this if I was offered it.
Edit: Just to clarify, I'm not suggesting the article is not genuine, but that it is probably of american or continental manufacture and has been marked with fake english punches to increase the value. It is still a nice thing as far as I can see, and I don't see why it shouldn't be of the period you mention.
Edit: Just to clarify, I'm not suggesting the article is not genuine, but that it is probably of american or continental manufacture and has been marked with fake english punches to increase the value. It is still a nice thing as far as I can see, and I don't see why it shouldn't be of the period you mention.
Thanks all. What an interesting array of opinions. Yet no apparent consensus.
If I understand emperorsnewclothes' position, the brooch appears to date from circa 1900. Right? Then does it follow that the economics of the time were such that manufacturing "off shore" could be done for significantly less cost than in Birmingham? Even today when off-shore manufacturing is common, a prime underlying requirement is huge volume. Was there call for such volume? If so, wouldn't we expect to have found many more pieces with "interesting" hallmarks? What were the economic condition of the times?
Supposing that this set of stamps is "duty dodging", surely there would be more evidence of that happening than just this single piece wouldn't there? After all, that anchor punch is quite distinctive. Criminals are stupid. Were the maker to successfully dodge the duties once with this particular piece, it seems to me highly likely that he'd do it again. And again. And again. Eventually he'd get caught but all of his dodge-em work would still be out in the market.
I thank you all for your replies and encourage you to continue to "work, work your thoughts" on this puzzle.
-- The quote is from the Prologue to Act III Shakespeare's King Henry V.
If I understand emperorsnewclothes' position, the brooch appears to date from circa 1900. Right? Then does it follow that the economics of the time were such that manufacturing "off shore" could be done for significantly less cost than in Birmingham? Even today when off-shore manufacturing is common, a prime underlying requirement is huge volume. Was there call for such volume? If so, wouldn't we expect to have found many more pieces with "interesting" hallmarks? What were the economic condition of the times?
Supposing that this set of stamps is "duty dodging", surely there would be more evidence of that happening than just this single piece wouldn't there? After all, that anchor punch is quite distinctive. Criminals are stupid. Were the maker to successfully dodge the duties once with this particular piece, it seems to me highly likely that he'd do it again. And again. And again. Eventually he'd get caught but all of his dodge-em work would still be out in the market.
I thank you all for your replies and encourage you to continue to "work, work your thoughts" on this puzzle.
-- The quote is from the Prologue to Act III Shakespeare's King Henry V.