Jewellery experts, dealers, historians, journalists, students...

Identify your jewels

Whose maker's mark is this? Is this brooch from the 1930s? Discover the answer by searching through a comprehensive database of hundreds of jewellery maker's marks and assay marks, or by exploring an image database that includes photos from antique books, magazines, and advertisements. This unique and user-friendly tool consolidates a wealth of information on jewellery into one convenient location.

Valuable knowledge at your fingertips...

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Hundreds of jewellery marks

When was a specific mark in use? Who did the workshop work for? Is it 18k gold? If you don't want to sift through numerous sources to find your answers, use our unique database to easily research assay or maker's marks. This tool provides names, periods, and details whenever available. New marks from various jewellers, workshops, countries, and assay offices will be added weekly to cover as many aspects of jewellery as possible.

Hundreds of jewellery photos

Old books and magazines are excellent sources of information on jewellery. However, with so many available, finding what you need can be time-consuming unless you have hours to browse through them all. We do the work for you. By referencing all jewellery found in old publications, you can now explore a visual database that combines photos from antique magazines and advertisements. Use keywords to find your jewellery and access the information as it was published at the time.

About

With ResearchJewel my goal is to share with you my knowledge based on years of experience and to give a better and more accurate understanding of each and every jewel.

Vanessa Cron

Full access for US$ 450 / year

  • Database of hundreds of jewellery marks
  • Find marks through letters, symbols, shapes, etc...
  • Database of hundreds of jewellery photos
  • Find jewels through keywords
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You can find us on @researchjewel