In jewelry, HGE stands for heavy gold electroplate. That means the piece is plated with gold, not solid.
HGE indicates Heavy Gold Electroplate. Usually gold is not set into goldplate but solid gold or silver.
HGE is hard gold electroplate, so no it is not real gold. It is likely gold plate.
It is worth nothing at all. HGE refers to heavy gold electroplated. Though 18KT refers to 18 karat gold or 75 percentage gold, 18KT HGE is worth nothing.
Not a lot- HGE means Heavy Gold Electroplate- it is a thin layer of gold over another metal.
Probably not because the HGE mark indicates that it has heavy gold electroplate, not solid gold.
14kt hge ring gold
HGE stands for Heavy Gold Electroplate - Unfortunately it isn't worth much if anything, as the plating is very thin.
Heavy Gold Electroplate
heavy gold electroplate, zero gold value
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.
as of January 10, 2011 the price of gold is $1373 per ounce hge have very little gold on it you can get like $3-$5 maximum
Probably not. The HGE mark is an indication of "heavy gold electroplate." This means that the ring is made of some metal over which a layer of gold is plated.