XRF Test Results for Pink Glazed Winifred & Lily Ceramic dog Food Bowl (sent in by a Lead Safe Mama reader for testing)

| | | | | | | | | | |



 


This is an ad-free article.

We are publishing this article as ad-free to make it easier for you to read. If you would like to support our independent consumer goods testing by contributing (which will also help us keep our more widely-read articles ad-free!), click here. Thank you!


For those new to the Lead Safe Mama 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).

  • Tamara owns and runs Lead Safe Mama, LLC — a community collaborative woman-owned small business for childhood Lead poisoning prevention and consumer goods safety.
  • Since 2009, Tamara has been using XRF technology (a scientific testing method) using the exact instrumentation employed by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to test consumer goods for toxicants (specifically heavy metals — including Lead, Cadmium, Mercury, Antimony, and Arsenic).
  • Since July of 2022, the work of Lead Safe Mama, LLC has been responsible for 5 product recalls (FDA and CPSC).
  • All test results reported on this website are science-based, accurate, and replicable.
  • Items that Lead Safe Mama, LLC reports on are tested multiple times to confirm the results published (for each component tested).
  • Tamara’s work was featured in Consumer Reports Magazine in February 2023 (March 2023 print edition) and The Guardian in November 2023.

Published: December 18, 2023

Hey Lead Safe Mama friends, I am doing my best to catch up with reporting on consumer goods XRF testing done earlier this year! To make this go more quickly (so the people who sent in these items for testing — and the rest of the Lead Safe Mama community — will have these test results after months of being very patient!), I am going to focus for the next couple of days on just publishing the test results (without any of the customary additional specific information). I will update the articles with additional information once I am all caught-up with publishing those results.

As background for each of these articles, I wanted readers to have the the following context:


XRF Test Results for the Pink Glazed Ceramic dog Food Bowl by Winifred & Lily Pictured Above

Note: Most pet supplies are not regulated for toxicants. Also, PLEASE pack things well if you are sending them in to Lead Safe Mama, LLC for testing. We often get things that have been smashed through transit, like this. 🙁

Reading #1) Center of the food surface of the dog food bowl (including the word “Hungry”)

  • Lead (Pb): 190 +/- 32 ppm
  • Cadmium (Cd): 20 +/- 10 ppm
  • Mercury (Hg): non-detect
  • Arsenic (As): non-detect
  • Chromium (Cr): 7,617 +/- 871 ppm
  • Manganese (Mn): 3,063 +/- 495 ppm
  • Iron (Fe): 7,884 +/- 546 ppm
  • Cobalt (Co): 554 +/- 173 ppm
  • Nickel (Ni): 831 +/- 137 ppm

Reading #2) Pink glazed area with no words in tested area

  • Lead (Pb): non-detect
  • Cadmium (Cd): 85 +/- 26 ppm
  • Mercury (Hg): non-detect
  • Arsenic (As): non-detect
  • Iron (Fe): 20,599 +/- 1,700 ppm
  • Zinc (Zn): 11,000 +/- 800 ppm

Reading #3) Black logo mark on bottom of bowl

  • Lead (Pb): 495 +/- 53 ppm
  • Cadmium (Cd): 20 +/- 12 ppm
  • Antimony (Sb): 41 +/- 26 ppm
  • Mercury (Hg): non-detect
  • Arsenic (As): non-detect
  • Chromium (Cr): 6,888 +/- 875 ppm
  • Iron (Fe): 5,638 +/- 473 ppm
  • Cobalt (Co): 2,070 +/- 250 ppm
  • Nickel (Ni): 1,125 +/- 165 ppm

Tamara Elise Rubin
Owner — Lead Safe Mama, LLC

~ End ~   

shop lead free banner

Never Miss an Important Article Again!

Join our Email List

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *