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It'll need confirmation, but likely the mark of Prudent Quitte, Rue Notre-Dame-de-Nazareth 42, Paris. The mark was registered on the 15th November 1882.
It'll need confirmation, but likely the mark of Prudent Quitte, Rue Notre-Dame-de-Nazareth 42, Paris. The mark was registered on the 15th November 1882.
I guess the easy answer is beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Antique oars are basically a stick with a blade attached. In this case the blade is rather like a triangle, and is at the top, what hangs down is the stick. Like most words in French there is more than one translation, but in this case I see an oar quite plainly. Sometimes the symbols are more like a Rohrschach test, but having had a few courses in psychology, I would recommend you say you see an oar, rather than a revolver.
Sorry Trev,
Maurice
The mark of Quitte with a revolver as a device is not a match at all, as Quitte was a manufacturing jeweller (fabricant bijoutier), not a flatware maker.