This is the place to come to learn about Avery style needle cases.

Sterling Silver - Geometric Pattern

Quadruple Silver 
Geometric Pattern needle case
Needle Case (photographs courtesy of Bunny's Place)


UK Patent 1868-3517 drawing

Design Details

Needle Case Type:

Quadruple

Patent/Registered to:

William Avery, Redditch Needle Manufacturer and Albert Fenton of the same place, Machinist

Patent/Design Representation #:

Mechanical Patent: #3517

Patent/Design Registration Date:

November 19, 1868

Location of Patent/Design Registration:

British Library - Business and Intellectual Property Centre – London

Reference #:

1868-3517, Figures 7-10

Dimensions:

3.3 x 7

Material:

Silver

Name Variations:

G. C. H. & Co - Birmingham

Other Variations:

See other Quadruples

US Patent

US 1870-98904

Additional Photographs

Detail views front and back

Silver

Silver is a grayish white shiny metal used to make mirrors, jewelry, silverware, coins and other ornamental items.  Because it is a precious metal, items made with silver often contain a small percentage of another metal.  For example, most sterling silver is an alloy of 92.5% silver with 7.5% copper.  Items made of silver usually contain some type of hallmark identifying them as such.  Similar hallmarks are used to indicate whether an item is silver-plated.  As a result, any item that appears to be made of silver but lacks the appropriate hallmark is usually made of something else.  During the Victorian period many items were made of or plated with an alloy of copper, zinc and nickel known as nickel-silver.  Nickel-silver was used because its appearance was similar to silver but it was much less expensive and didn’t tarnish like silver does.

silver

Hallmarks

English antiques made of silver usually contain five hallmarks: a silver standard mark, a city mark, a date letter, a duty mark (which narrows the date), and a makers mark.  The hallmarks on the needle case on this page signify the following: the anchor means it was made in Birmingham, the letter U indicates the item was made in 1869 and the makers mark indicates this item was made by G. C. H. & Co.  According to the Birmingham Assay Office this refers to G. C. Haseler & Co, a jeweler from Birmingham who first registered their makers mark in 1860.  Additional hallmarks could be located under the cap on the other side of this item or on the interior packet holders as photographs of these areas are unavailable.  For more information on English hallmarks be sure to visit www.silvermakersmarks.co.uk and www.925-1000.com.

Silver hallmarks

Engraving

Engraving is the process of cutting or carving a design onto a hard, flat surface such as wood, stone or metal using a small chisel or tool.  In fine art the term engraving is used to describe the printed image created from the incised wood or metal plate that contains the design.  With jewelery and other ornamental items professional hand engravers are able to add detailed scenes and elaborate scrollwork or geometric patterns like the ones seen on the needle case on this page.  Often an individual’s initials are inserted to give the item a personalized touch.  Items with customized hand engraving are usually more expensive than ones decorate by machine processes.

Silver engraving