Well I'd say it's mid range - 9 is the lowest, 24 is the highest quality
its means 14 carat gold plate.
it is a 14 carat gold ring
AVIV is the name of the designer/manufacturer and 14KP (the p stands for plumb) means that it is at least 14.00/24 parts gold. . In older pieces 14k might contain as little as 13.51/24. Basically if it is marked 14kp it is 14k gold EXACTLY
AVIV is the name of the designer/manufacturer and 14KP (the p stands for plumb) means that it is at least 14.00/24 parts gold. . In older pieces 14k might contain as little as 13.51/24. Basically if it is marked 14kp it is 14k gold EXACTLY
K-R is the logo of the company who made your ring.
14kt means that the ring is 14 karat gold. The p might mean that the ring is only plated in gold.
What 1s 14kp
14KP is 14 karat plumb/pure. It's 14 karat (.585) purity gold. The JTL is an artist's (or owners, less likely) initials. Normally 14 karat could be used to describe something with something like 2.2% less gold purity.
" 14K P" is solid gold. The P, does not stand for plated, but PLUMB, meaning exactly being of 14K content - solid 14K. The term 14KP stands for "karat plumb" gold---meaning exactly 14K....no more, no less. KP does NOT, I repeat does NOT mean plated. It is solid 14K gold. Karat weights are usually determined with a small, fractional variance allowed by law. Katar gold which has NO fractional variance at all is called "plumb" gold -- typically identified with a "KP" hallmark. Thinking KP means gold plate is a common mis-conception. Just Google 14KP and you'll get the entire explanation of the origin. Stylecrest is a brand name-that of a ring manufacturer
The 14kp markings mean that it is 14ct gold, the pms may be a number of things. could mean precious metal silver which indicates that its a 14ct gold plated silver ring or the pms might be a companys intials. every hallmark in Britain has intials at the start so you know where it came from.
If you see the imprint of "B 25" stamped on a ring, the "B" most likely represents a specific date. The "25" represents the quality of the gold or the karat.
If something is stamped "18K HGE" it is not real gold. The letters "HGE" is a quality mark used for costume jewelry, and it stands for "Heavy Gold Electroplate". The item that is electroplated has a very thin layer of gold that has been applied to its base metal, which is usually brass. This is considered "costume" jewelry since it is not gold through and through. 18KT HGE is absolutely REAL gold and in fact, the electroplating on HGE is "heavy" therefore it is quite good quality. Just because the ring is not solid gold doesn't mean the gold isn't real. The peice you have, if it appears in good condition, is very good quality.