Announcing Lead Safe Mama’s Top Ten Posts for 2019!!!!
Scroll down below each of the images to see the next most popular post for 2019!
Click on each of the images to read the post related to that image!
Page views listed next to each number are as of the moment of publishing this post and will be updated at midnight on New Year’s Eve (because that’s the kind of thing I like to do on New Year’s Eve!)
#10
30,048 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#9
30,705 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#8
31,085 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#7
31,350 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#6
31,883 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#5
32,386 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#4
45,324 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#3
99,702 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#2
203,578 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
#1
1,096,869 views in 2019 (as of 12/28 – 5:45 p.m.)
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I just purchased the all white Corelle (Vitrelle Dinner Set) to replace my “Vintage” with lead in the paint. I thought I saw where you wrote that the mugs in the new all white sets still contain lead. But now I can’t find that post. Can you confirm that I need to discard the new Corelle mugs also? Thank you!
We’ve used Corelle and Pyrex products for decades and I have yet to find an article that uses paint on a surface, which is what the regulations on lead apply to.
They specifically do not apply to decorative images that become part of the material, as in fired ceramics or glass… even plastics where the decoration is within the material… and not a paint film dried onto the surface.