Tusk 316 stainless steel used to make the piece
925 is a standard marking for Sterling Silver, thus making it a silver ring, not gold.
Your ring was probably made in England or another country that doesn't use our standards. In USA we mark items with KT such as 18KT. Your ring is probably 22KT gold. it is gold plated sterling silver In the UK we do not use 925 on gold or silver. We use a 'Hallmark' that is for every area of the UK from which it was made. This is helpful when 'pricing' antiques as the hallmark identifies the area, manufacturer and era from which it originated.
"18k" stamped on a silver ring typically indicates that the ring is plated with 18 karat gold. It means the ring has a thin layer of 18k gold over a sterling silver base.
The stamp "RSC" inside a gold ring typically refers to the manufacturer or jeweler who made the ring, rather than indicating the metal composition. You would need to look for a separate stamp indicating the gold purity, such as "10K" for 10 carat gold. If the ring is a Roman silver coinage, it would likely have a different stamp or markings to denote its origin or historical significance.
The "355" stamp inside the gold ring likely refers to the gold's purity, meaning it is 355 parts per 1000 gold (or 35.5% pure gold). The ".925" stamp indicates that the ring is also made with sterling silver, which is 92.5% pure silver.
The proportion of gold/silver is 10%.
It means That is .500 pure silver which is a lower grade silver then .999 pure. .999 silver is THE most absolute pure silver. I fi is a GOLD ring that says it , then it means it is a .500 silver ring with ( HGE) heavy gold electoplate.
Have a ring RJ 8 marked inside. The 8 refers to ring size. Am searching RJ myself.
925 is a standard marking for Sterling Silver, thus making it a silver ring, not gold.
it is not gold electroplate it is gold
gold 335
i have a gold ring with ING stamped on the inside , what does that mean ?
Your ring was probably made in England or another country that doesn't use our standards. In USA we mark items with KT such as 18KT. Your ring is probably 22KT gold. it is gold plated sterling silver In the UK we do not use 925 on gold or silver. We use a 'Hallmark' that is for every area of the UK from which it was made. This is helpful when 'pricing' antiques as the hallmark identifies the area, manufacturer and era from which it originated.
it tells you about the puarity of silver used to make that ring
Gilding is gold plating; normally on silver.
"18k" stamped on a silver ring typically indicates that the ring is plated with 18 karat gold. It means the ring has a thin layer of 18k gold over a sterling silver base.
Unit of Gold