MrNate would be proud. I knew it was silver and I found the tiny marks right away (They were pretty obvious though). I wanted to confirm that I got the marks right on this small, silver-capped, crystal jar. I think it is the Copenhagen City Mark with a 59 in the water for the year 1959, and the Grann & Laglye Mark next to it. I couldn't find any examples of a covered jar like this, but I might have been using the wrong search terms. I don't know if the little doodad on the top has any significance. I'm not sure what its purpose is either. It is 4 1/2 inches tall and 4 inches in diameter at its widest point. Any help would be most appreciated.
Given the 59 on the 3 towers mark, seems to me that the Assay Master should be Siggaard Yes it should.
Pretty powder jar. Regarding Danish marks, they were/are voluntary, and are notoriously varied, often without adherence to 'regulations' - there's nothing particularly unusual in your marks... ~Cheryl
So, this is rather ambiguous and irrelevant to yours. Mine has mark of Christian Heise, who I believe was an assayer and later a Maker, so not relevant.
Since I’ve got my photos up, maybe @DragonflyWink might know something about them? They are Demitasse size. The date is 1938. They were my grandfathers, who came from Copenhagen. Sorry, to interrupt your thread, Kiko.