Page 34 - br-sep-2020
P. 34

September 2020                                                                      September 2020

       DORSET TRADING STANDARDS


       Dorset Council Trading Standards Service check and approve
       businesses so you don’t have to.
       For more information visit www.buywithconfidence.gov.uk or
       call 08454 040506.
       To report or seek advice about problems you have
       experienced when dealing with a trader call 08454 040506.



       Trading Standards, the gold standard
       The   hallmarking   of
       gold  and  silver  dates
       back  to  1300  when
       Ki n g   E d w ar d   I
       introduced    it   to
       protect standards and
       to  prevent  craftsmen
       committing     fraud
       w h e n    m a k i n g
       jewellery.    The  first
       stamp was a leopard’s
       h e a d     w h i c h
       symbolised  the  King’s
       m   a  r  k      o  f
       authentication.    The
       word  ‘hallmark’  didn’t
       come  into  use  until  the  15   century  when  craftsmen  took  their  artefacts  to
                                 th
       Goldsmiths’ Hall in London to be assayed.  Today there are four assay offices in
       operation, in London, Birmingham, Edinburgh and Sheffield.
       Hallmarking techniques and regulations have been fine-tuned since those early
       days.    The  current  legislation  that  governs  hallmarking  has  been  effective  since
       the creation of the 1973 Hallmarking Act  which is enforced by trading standards
       officers.
       If a jeweller makes items of silver, gold, platinum or palladium and wants to sell
       them  they  are  obliged  to  get  them  assayed  which  guarantees  they  are  good
       quality.  The hallmark is then applied so it can legally be put onto the market.
       A  2019 report confirmed that up to a third of precious metal products supplied
       online  are  unhallmarked  and  could  therefore  be  fake.    Jewellery  fraud  has
       consistently been an issue in the precious metal industry where counterfeit items


                                        34                                                                                       43
   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39