Test on food surface of bowl
- Iron (Fe): 978 +/- 203 ppm
- Bismuth (Bi): 138 +/- 37 ppm
Test on logo area on bottom of bowl
- Lead (Pb): 30 +/- 13 ppm
- Chromium (Cr): 217 +/- 61 ppm
- Bismuth (Bi): 81 +/- 15 ppm
- Zinc (Zn): 60 +/- 21 ppm
- Cobalt (Co): 4,544 +/- 279 ppm
- Iron (Fe): 1,534 +/- 214 ppm
- Indium (In): 19 +/- 8 ppm
- Vanadium (V): 69 +/- 30 ppm
- Titanium (Ti): 132 +/- 41 ppm
As always, thank you for reading and for sharing my posts. Please let me know if you have any questions.
Tamara Rubin
#LeadSafeMama
Susan Edwards says
I’m not sure I understand the results you posted above. Are you saying that the 365 lines is safe?
Tamara says
Hi Sussan,
These are the specific test results for the specific item tested pictured here. There is trace lead in the logo on the non-food surface of the dish. This amount of Lead (found in this particular dish) is considered safe by all standards. It’s up to you to decide if that is something you might be comfortable with. For my family I choose for all of the dishes in our home to be 100% Lead-free.
Tamara
Michele says
Hi My son and I have each detoxed heavy metals including lead. Can you point me to a set of dishes that are 100% lead free?
Thank you!
Michele
Andrea says
My stamp is black not blue on the 365 range. Is the stamp dangerous
? Or is it too small to worry about? We can only make that decision based on knowing if this will mean we will be exposed to lead?
Annabel says
Corelle or Duralex. But not the correlle mugs. Tamara has done testing on these brands here. Get the plain, undecorated Corelle.