For those new to this website:
Tamara Rubin is a multiple-federal-award-winning independent advocate for childhood Lead poisoning prevention and consumer goods safety, and a documentary filmmaker. She is also a mother of Lead-poisoned children (two of her sons were acutely Lead-poisoned in 2005). Since 2009, Tamara has been using XRF technology (a scientific method used by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission) to test consumer goods for toxicants (specifically heavy metals — including Lead, Cadmium, Mercury, Antimony, and Arsenic). All test results reported on this website are science-based, accurate, and replicable. Items are tested multiple times to confirm the test results for each component tested. Tamara’s work was featured in Consumer Reports Magazine in February of 2023 (March 2023 print edition).
Reading #1). On part of dish with flowers remaining:
- Lead (Pb): 39,800 +/- 900 ppm
- Barium (Ba): 155 +/- 73 ppm
- Zirconium (Zr): 13,100 +/- 400 ppm
- Zinc (Zn): 296 +/- 38 ppm
- Copper (Cu): 267 +/- 49 ppm
- Iron (Fe): 1,785 +/- 208 ppm
- Manganese (Mn): 799 +/- 333 ppm
- Vanadium (V): 15,600 +/- 800 ppm
- Titanium (Ti): 1,682 +/- 293 ppm
Reading #2). On surface of dish with no flowers visible:
- Lead (Pb): 32,400 +/- 900 ppm
- Zirconium (Zr): 13,400 +/- 500 ppm
- Zinc (Zn): 128 +/- 36 ppm
- Copper (Cu): 310 +/- 65 ppm
- Iron (Fe): 1,236 +/- 243 ppm
- Manganese (Mn): 1,821 +/- 366 ppm
Reading #3). On brown stripe of dish:
- Lead (Pb): 37,000 +/- 800 ppm
- Zirconium (Zr): 9,895 +/- 304 ppm
- Tin (Sn): 92 +/- 22 ppm
- Zinc (Zn): 159 +/- 29 ppm
- Copper (Cu): 269 +/- 48 ppm
- Cobalt (Co): 251 +/- 86 ppm
- Iron (Fe): 1,658 +/- 196 ppm
- Manganese (Mn): 1,212 +/- 232 ppm
- Titanium (Ti): 308 +/- 92 ppm
Reading #4). On back mark (black writing):
- Lead (Pb): 34,300 +/- 800 ppm
- Chromium (Cr): 1,011 +/- 166 ppm
- Zirconium (Zr): 13,100 +/- 400 ppm
- Platinum (Pt): 309 +/- 120 ppm
- Zinc (Zn): 205 +/- 33 ppm
- Copper (Cu): 306 +/- 51 ppm
- Cobalt (Co): 1,389 +/- 151 ppm
- Iron (Fe): 3,954 +/- 289 ppm
- Manganese (Mn): 2,056 +/- 302 ppm
- Titanium (Ti): 451 +/- 113 ppm
Thank you for reading and sharing this work!
This article was published the weekend of June 4-6, 2021.
With the articles I am writing this weekend, I am doing my best to write up and publish as many test result sets as possible as quickly as possible (because I am over a YEAR behind in my writing as a result of having absolutely no childcare for most of the pandemic [no childcare since about two weeks before the pandemic actually… as my kids were already out sick with various illnesses when the pandemic started])!
Yup, that’s right — some people have been waiting (ever so patiently) for more than a year for the test results for their items because of the impact the pandemic has had on my ability to test consumer goods, coherently write about them, and also take the time to document each item with photographs.
To this end, in the articles this weekend I am simply including photos of the items tested along with the XRF test results and will not be writing more specifically about each of these products — like I usually do — at this time (in the interest of getting as much information out to my readers as quickly as possible).
THAT SAID, if you are new here, below are EIGHT LINKS with some important background information:
- This link discusses the testing I report here on LeadSafeMama.com.
- This link has a short video that shows you how to efficiently search the more than 3,000 articles and pages here on the Lead Safe Mama website.
- This link has info about my background as well as rates to hire me for an event, a private home consultation, or as a consultant.
- This link has information about my October United States travel schedule and my current calendar for scheduling in-person home consultations with me this year.
- This link has information about hiring me for a Zoom consult, to teach a class, or to be a speaker at a Zoom event.
- This is the link to the documentary feature film I directed and produced on childhood Lead poisoning. I encourage you to watch it if you have not yet seen it. It is 92 minutes long, so grab some popcorn… it is up on YouTube free of charge.
- This is the link to our new “Shop Lead Safe Mama” website, which lists only products (in various categories) that we have found to be consistently Lead-free (when tested with an XRF instrument).
- This is the link that explains how to have something of yours tested with the test results reported here on the site.
I think that’s it! Let me know if you have any questions about this particular item by commenting at the bottom of this piece. Thanks again for being here!
Tamara Rubin
#LeadSafeMama
Angela Ikerd says
Does Royal Doulton Will o’the Wisp bought in 1979 have lead in it? Thanks!
Vonda says
Yesterday I just bought a partial set of Royal Doulton Lambethware Florinda dishes (7 cups, 3 small bowls, no plates, just 3 bigger things like a gravy server etc.) for $10 at a thrift store because I love the flowers and the look of the dishes. I wanted to find out more about them so I googled them today and I just ran across your site and information about them containing lead! I will mostly be drinking out of the cups and sometimes eating out of the bowls. The bigger things I might not use as much. I don’t know anything about lead poisoning or leaching. I saw how much lead you said is in them and it sounds scary. How concerned do I need to be about using them? I have mysterious health problems that I don’t want to make worse. Now I’m wondering if my problems could be from lead. We have used Corelle dishes for years that my aunt got for me at an estate sale. So my question is, is it safe to use the Royal Doulton dishes and do Corelle dishes have an unsafe amount of lead?