Featured R&B mark - Reed & Barton?

Discussion in 'Silver' started by drg642, May 16, 2017.

  1. drg642

    drg642 Well-Known Member

    I have a spoon ring that appears to be in the Reed & Barton Wild Rose I pattern. It is marked R&B Sterling. I wonder about the mark as I have not been able to find another Reed & Barton mark that is a simple R&B. I've looked in the Kovel's marks book and at the 925 - 1000.com site.

    Any thoughts about this mark?

    Thanks!

    rbw1.JPG
    rbw3.JPG

    rbw2.JPG
     
  2. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    It sure does look like the Wild Rose I variant of the Harlequin pattern (1958-1976 or so.) Given the very small space available for the marks, I can imagine that they abbreviated to R&B for this kind of thing.
     
    cxgirl likes this.
  3. drg642

    drg642 Well-Known Member

    Thanks Bakers. I guess I thought that the ring was made from a regular piece of flatware that would have been normally marked.
     
  4. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    But "spoon rings" were originally made by the company, not by someone who bought up random spoons and reworked them into jewelry. At least that's my recollection.
     
    cxgirl likes this.
  5. drg642

    drg642 Well-Known Member

    Good to know, I did not realize that companies made spoon rings - I thought they were all reworked from regular flatware.
     
  6. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    Well, like I said - my recollection - but that not be correct, of course. There were also tiny "lapel pins" in various patterns too.

    The best way to check is to see whether you can find an unaltered piece of the Harlequin pattern that shows how it is marked.
     
    cxgirl likes this.
  7. clutteredcloset49

    clutteredcloset49 Well-Known Member

    I thought flatware rings were a product of street artists/craft shows. Way back in the '70s, where someone thought up the idea and then it spread.

    I didn't realize the silver companies also produced and marketed the rings. Bakers, do you know when they started doing that?
     
    komokwa likes this.
  8. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    I don't, cluttered. And as I said above that "information" may just be a figment of what is now a very old "memory."
     
    clutteredcloset49 likes this.
  9. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    I think the started out as street vendor/craft fair items, and the manufacturers eventually decided to cash in themselves.
     
  10. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    I don't know about the rings, but in 1970, I bought a factory-direct Lunt spoon bracelet at a jewelry store in the town where Lunt silver was still being made.
     
    clutteredcloset49 likes this.
  11. Hollyblue

    Hollyblue Well-Known Member

    Depending on which internet site you would believe....spoon rings have been on and off since the 1600's.
     
    clutteredcloset49 likes this.
  12. SBSVC

    SBSVC Well-Known Member

    Well, it appears that Lunt DID make its own spoon rings, too:
    img0 (45).jpg

    As for R&B, I don't know.
     
    clutteredcloset49 and Bakersgma like this.
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