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Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Wed Oct 27, 2010 12:25 am
by Pru
Just a little more confirmation. Here is a picture of the marking to a blade which is also marked to the handle with the lighthouse marking and the AP mark.

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Wed Oct 27, 2010 12:28 am
by Pru
Well there should be a picture. The knife blade reads A.Prip Denmark and the handle has the same markings as shown above with a lighthouse and the AP mark.

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Wed Oct 27, 2010 3:05 am
by dognose
Hi Pru,

Welcome to the Forum.

Try this: How to Add Images

Regards Trev.

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Fri Oct 14, 2011 10:11 pm
by Pru
Thanks, I have got my act together now. I have a cutlery set marked with the AP and lighthouse marks as above. The cake knife is marked to the blade as descibed in my earlier post. The photos are now properly submitted. The A Prip cutlery always has ornate designs seemingly not used by other makers as is often the case with many Danish cutlery patterns.

Image
Image

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2011 1:14 am
by dognose
Hi Pru,

Many thanks for the information.

Trev.

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Mon Oct 17, 2011 7:47 am
by Pru
As the links above are now obsolete I will attempt to display as many Danish silver plate marks as I can.

There is a great website with the history of Cohr silver and the marks used by them which are very useful.

This information is given in a history of Cohr silver at

http://www.cohrsilver.dk/cohr/index.htm

The first photo below shows the torch mark that was registered in 1929 by the "Common Representation of Danish Goldsmiths" (FDG) as a trademark. They wanted it to be used as a quality mark for silverplate sold by the members only.

The torch mark is shown with letters FDG this was used from 1929 to around 1932. The letters DFA stand for Dansk Forsølvningsanstalt København as above. The name DANA which I think may be the trademark for the silver plate produced by the company the same as Cohr used ATlA as their silver plate trade mark. I have seen DANA on many cutlery patterns. I may be wrong but it seems logical. Last is P for plet meaning the piece is plated.

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The next shows the same era torchmark with larger letters and also shows Cohr Silver's trademark for silver plate ATLA in usef from 1926. It also has a DTA mark for The National Association for Danish Enterprise, an independant organisation created to support and market Danish produced consumer goods in Denmark and abroad. ( see Cohr history link above). The last mark is 30 indicating the thickness of silver.

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The last mark in this group again shows the torchmark with small letters FDG has the name ABSA and the detailed figure of Absalon. As above I think the ABSA may be a silverplate trade mark for the Absalon Silver. There is a P for plet meaning plate.

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Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Mon Jun 09, 2014 4:48 pm
by Essexboy Fisher
Hello I assume this to be another “M.T.B” mark by the makers “Madsen & T.Baagoes” as referred to earlier in this thread by Hose_dk.

https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-qDgJ ... PN+003.jpg

(admin photo edit - images too large - link only - see Posting Requirements )

The marks are on a serving spoon and could anyone confirm the relevance of the “S” mark? Is it an alternative to the "P", "plet" mark?
Yours,
Fishless

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Tue Jun 10, 2014 2:53 pm
by Hose_dk
P is Plet = plated
S has no meaning in Danish silver. I assume that S is therefor a mark that customers should relate to silver - in their mind. A guess, but a fair one.

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2014 4:02 pm
by Essexboy Fisher
Hello I found some more Danish silver plate spoons and currently I don’t think there is an image of the these marks on the thread for comparison.

Image

If these were British electroplate spoons the “N.S” would be expected but Hose_dk said the “S” for silver was not usually seen on Danish “plate”. Could items specifically made for export have the “N.S” added? The spoon is certainly of better quality than “day to day” use spoons. Is the figural mark, I see as a “cog”, a known Trademark of any particular company?
Hope the picture size is ok this time.

Fishless

Re: Danish Silverplate Marks for the website

Posted: Thu Feb 08, 2024 1:04 pm
by Traintime
A newly posted group of variant marks from a singular service set of one pattern, all of which might link to COHR product in pleet/plet/plate (numerous marks with two tower variants in each case):

https://www.925-1000.com/forum/viewtopi ... d6#p218097