![]() It does not mean something that is silver coloured or silver plated. Please bear in mind that in this context “silver” means the element silver, number 48 on the periodic table. If you want some help, don't hesitate to email me, but do try to send me a clear picture or sketch of the mark you need help with. I can't (for copyright reasons apart from anything else) reproduce the information in Bradbury or Chaffers, but I hope the examples here will help you read the hallmarks in your own watch. However, I realised that many people with a watch that they have perhaps been given or inherited don't have ready access to these standard works, so on this page I show some examples of the British hallmarks that were found in any watch cases that were hallmarked before 1 June 1907, and which continued to be used in British manufactured watch cases after 1907. I started my pages about hallmarking to document information about imported watches, which is not readily available in the standard references such as Bradbury and Chaffers. Bocks and Rams: IWC and Stauffer Trademarks.New product: Leather and Sterling Alberts. ![]()
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