Sterling is 92.5% silver. The other 7.5% is usually copper, but can include other metals. Copper is added to silver to reduce the material cost, and to increase the hardness. Sterling is by no means the "highest" quality of silver. It is slightly harder than .999 "pure" silver, but it also corrodes much more easily because of the copper content. The black oxidation on sterling silver is a result of copper catalyzing the reaction with air. Salt will also cause sterling to corrode more quickly, but will not affect .999 silver the same way. Salt is found in sweat, seawater, at the table, etc., and all of those sources can cause sterling silver items to turn black. Sterling silver is often coated in a fine layer of .999 silver to hold off corrosion and for the brighter reflectivity of pure silver.
Such as I know that sterling mean real (genuine) thing. Sterling silver is an alloy of pure silver containing 92.5 by weight of silver and 7.5 by weight of other metals, usually copper. This 7.5% of different metal actually improves the durability of the finished product.
Sterling silver is a term used by the U.S. government to describe a silver alloy consisting of 92.5 percent silver and 7.5 percent of another metal, such as copper. The baser metal is used to add strength to silver
Jewelry made with 92.5 sterling silver called sterling silver jewelry. Sterling silver is an alloy of pure silver containing 92.5 by weight of silver and 7.5 by weight of other metals, usually copper. This 7.5% of different metal actually improves the durability of the finished product.
That means that it real sterling silver; the jewelry consists of 92.5 % pure silver and the rest is a type of alloy, usually copper. 925 is a mark to indicate purity of the silver.
Nice question! percous Sterling Silver.
It is an abbreviation of the word "sterling," meaning that the piece of jewelery is made from sterling silver.
"What is chase sterling silver?"The term "chased sterling silver" refers to the method of 'moving' the silver with a rather small pointed tool and an equally small mallet. The silver is not removed, it is simply moved as the design or textured background is made with the help of the little mallet. Descriptions of this technique are often described as "hand chasing", or "hand chased sterling silver", or "sterling silver chasing".
It is an abbreviation of the word "sterling," meaning that the piece of jewelery is made from sterling silver.
A1 is an English term for silver plate. Items with A1 are not sterling silver.
international silver co. but not meaning its a sterling still might be plate
Sterling silver is different than silver plated because it is solid silver, meaning that the silver is in every part of the object, although it can have different elements mixed in. Silver plated is just a coat of silver on the outside of varying thicknesses.
H.F.B. STERLING likely refers to sterling silver made by the manufacturer H.F.B. The term "sterling" indicates that the silver alloy contains at least 92.5% silver, with the remaining percentage typically being copper to increase durability. You may find this hallmark on silver items such as jewelry, flatware, or decorative pieces.
The term "sterling silver" actually comes from the "pound sterling," the unit of British currency. British silver coinage was for hundreds of years (excepting various bouts of debasing over the years) 92.5% pure. Thus, "sterling silver," which is 92.5% pure, merely refers to silver which is as pure as the pound sterling. As a historical note, the purity of silver in British coinage was reduced in 1920 to 50% silver, and in 1947, silver was replaced with a cupro-nickel alloy in British "silver" coinage.
No. Sterling Silver is 925 Silver (they are one in the same)Sterling Silver - Sterling silver is a composition of 925 parts pure silver with 75 parts of copper
"Sterling silver" refers to the purity of a particular silver object - specifically, sterling silver is 92.5% silver.
925 is the mark for sterling silver, meaning the piece is 92.5% silver with 8.5% of other metals, usually copper.
Oxidized silver is not necessarily sterling silver but sterling silver can be oxidized. Oxidation is a finish on silver, otherwise known as tarnish. Sterling silver can tarnish and silver plate can tarnish, too.