Antique signature identification starts with location, style, and context — where the mark sits, how it was applied, and what era it matches.
Why signatures matter more than you think
A signature is the single fastest path from “old thing” to “identified piece.” It anchors maker, era, and often region in one tiny stamp or scrawl.
Any seasoned collector knows the signature is rarely the whole story. But it’s the doorway. Without it, you’re guessing from style alone.
The trick is reading a signature in context. A name scratched into wet clay tells you something different than a name painted over a glaze. Same letters, different century.
I’ve handled pieces where the mark was the entire reason for the value — and pieces where a beautiful signature was a 1970s reproduction stamp. The skill is telling them apart.
For a broader primer on marks across categories, our complete identification guide to antique marks and signatures covers the foundation. This piece goes deeper on the reading of them.
Reading artist signatures on paintings and prints
Artist signatures sit in predictable places. Lower right corner is most common from the 19th century onward. Lower left runs a close second.
Look at the medium of the signature first. An oil signature should sit in the paint layer, not float above varnish. A signature applied on top of old varnish is a red flag.
Monograms were standard before 1850 for many European painters. Whistler used a butterfly. Dürer used the famous AD monogram. These count as signatures for attribution purposes.
Pencil signatures on prints belong in the margin, below the image. Etchings are typically signed and numbered in pencil — like “24/100” on the left, title centered, signature on the right.
Cross-check against authoritative reference collections. The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Smithsonian both publish high-resolution signature examples in their open-access archives.
Quick artist signature checks:
- Does the signature sit in the paint or on the varnish?
- Is the style consistent with the artist’s documented period?
- Does the canvas, stretcher, or paper match the supposed era?
- Are there period-correct labels or stamps on the reverse?
A matching signature on a wrong-era canvas means the signature is wrong, not the canvas.
Silversmith marks: the hallmark system decoded
Silver is the most rewarding category for signature work because the system is structured. British silver since 1300 has used a four-mark hallmark format.
The four marks are: maker’s mark (initials), standard mark (lion passant for sterling), assay office mark (city), and date letter. Together they pinpoint a piece to a single year.
American silver is less standardized but more readable. Most American silver after 1860 is marked “STERLING” or “925” plus a maker name. Coin silver pieces (pre-1860) often show just the silversmith’s name in a rectangle.
Continental European silver uses purity numbers — 800, 900, 950 — alongside maker punches. French silver wears the Minerva head for 950 standard from 1838 onward.
A common trap: silver-plate marked EPNS, EP, or A1. These are not silver hallmarks. Read more on the pewter vs silver test if you’re sorting an estate haul.
| Mark Type | Region | What It Tells You |
|---|---|---|
| Lion Passant | England | Sterling standard (.925) |
| Anchor | Birmingham | Assay office |
| Leopard’s Head | London | Assay office |
| Minerva Head | France | .950 silver, post-1838 |
| 800 / 835 / 900 | Germany, Italy | Purity in parts per thousand |
| STERLING | USA | Post-1860, .925 standard |
| Coin / Pure Coin | USA | Pre-1860, ~.900 silver |
The Victoria & Albert Museum holds one of the best silver mark archives in the world. Worth a deep dive when you’ve got something obscure.
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Identify on iPhone → Learn MoreFurniture labels, brands, and maker signatures
Furniture signatures are often hidden. Check drawer bottoms, the back of case pieces, the underside of chair seats, and inside lock cavities.
Paper labels were the standard from roughly 1820 to 1920. A surviving paper label dramatically raises value. Even a partial fragment can attribute a piece.
Brands and stencils came earlier and later. Shaker furniture often carries a brand. Stickley Mission pieces use a famous “Als ik kan” red decal plus a branded signature.
Handwritten signatures appear on the secondary wood of cabinetmaker pieces — typically the drawer interior or the underside of a tabletop. Look for chalk, pencil, or pen.
Dating a signature against the furniture periods chart from 1600 to 1940 is the fastest way to verify. A “Chippendale” signature on a piece with machine-cut dovetails is a fake.
Dovetails are the tell. Hand-cut dovetails (uneven, slightly angled) belong to pre-1860 work. Machine-cut dovetails (perfectly uniform) signal 1860 onward. The signature has to match the joinery era.
Porcelain and pottery: marks under the glaze
Ceramic signatures sit on the underside, called the foot or footring. They take three forms: incised (carved into wet clay), impressed (stamped before firing), and painted (applied under or over glaze).
Underglaze marks are older and more reliable. Overglaze marks were easier to fake and were used heavily from the late 19th century onward.
Meissen’s crossed swords are the most copied mark in ceramic history. Period Meissen swords are painted in cobalt blue under the glaze and feel smooth to the fingernail. Copies sit on top and catch the nail.
English potteries used printed marks heavily after 1840. “Made in England” appears post-1891 thanks to the McKinley Tariff Act. “England” alone (without “Made in”) signals 1891–1920 in most cases.
A quick patina check helps too. Real century-old porcelain shows fine surface scratches under raking light. New porcelain looks too clean.
For cross-referencing porcelain marks against catalogued examples, Kovel’s and WorthPoint both maintain searchable mark databases.
Tools, references, and verification workflow
Three physical tools cover 90% of signature work: a 10x loupe, raking-angle LED light, and a soft brush. The loupe shows you brush strokes, stamp impressions, and tool marks invisible to the eye.
A UV blacklight is the fourth tool. Modern paints and inks fluoresce. Period materials usually don’t. A signature glowing bright purple under UV is almost certainly recent.
Digital references have changed the game. Mobile apps now read marks from a photo and return likely matches in seconds. Our review of digital tools and resources for collectors breaks down which work and which don’t.
When you’ve identified a signature, verify the value with a second source. Compare against the best online antique appraisal sites for 2026 before insuring or selling.
For precious-metal pieces specifically, signature identification is half the story. The other half is metal content — our breakdown of silver melt value versus antique value and the gold hallmark guide on 10k, 14k, and 18k cover the math.
My standard workflow on an unknown piece:
- Photograph the mark in raking light with a coin or ruler for scale.
- Run it through a mark-ID app for a first guess.
- Cross-check against museum archives (V&A, Met, Smithsonian).
- Verify the piece’s construction matches the suggested era.
- Get a second opinion before any high-value transaction.
Skip step four and you’ll get burned. The signature has to match the piece, not the other way around.
Red flags that scream reproduction
Reproductions usually fail on three fronts: wrong placement, wrong technique, wrong wear pattern.
Wrong placement is the easiest spot. A silversmith mark on the outside of a teapot foot instead of the underside? Wrong. A painter’s signature too far from the corner? Suspicious.
Wrong technique is subtler. A stamped mark that should be hand-engraved looks too uniform. A hand-engraved mark that should be stamped wavers under the loupe.
Wear pattern is the tell pros rely on. A genuine signature on a 200-year-old chair will show the same wear as the surrounding wood. A fresh signature on aged wood stands out — sharper, cleaner, no oxidation in the grooves.
Those slightly uneven rim details on Georgian silver? Classic hand-hammering. A perfectly even rim with “Georgian” hallmarks is a Victorian or modern copy with imported marks.
Trust your gut on weight, balance, and feel. A piece that feels wrong usually is. Twenty years in, I still walk away from anything where the signature is the only good thing about it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best free app to identify antiques?
Antique Identifier App is the best free app to identify antiques, available as a free download on iPhone with no sign-up required. It specializes in reading silver hallmarks, porcelain maker’s marks, and period furniture details directly from your photos. The app returns likely maker matches, approximate date ranges, and value estimates in seconds, which makes it the fastest first-pass tool for any unknown signature or stamp. Strong performers on its database include British silver hallmarks, Meissen and Sèvres porcelain marks, and American furniture labels from 1820 onward.
Where do I find the signature on an antique piece?
Check the least-visible surface first. On furniture, that means drawer bottoms, the back of case pieces, and the underside of chair seats. On silver, look at the base or footring. On porcelain, flip the piece and inspect the underside. Paintings carry signatures in lower corners, and prints carry them in pencil along the margin below the image.
How can I tell if an antique signature is genuine or faked?
Three tests filter most fakes. First, check that the signature sits in the correct layer — under glaze, in paint, or impressed into wet clay as the period would require. Second, examine wear under raking light: a real signature shows the same oxidation and wear as surrounding material. Third, verify that the piece’s construction (dovetails, weight, glaze, canvas) matches the era the signature claims.
What does sterling silver hallmark identification involve?
British sterling hallmarks include four parts: a maker’s mark with initials, a standard mark (the lion passant), an assay office mark for the city, and a date letter pinpointing the year. American sterling is simpler — usually the word STERLING or 925 plus a maker stamp. Continental European silver uses purity numbers like 800, 900, or 950 alongside maker punches.
Are unsigned antiques still valuable?
Yes, often substantially. Style, construction quality, materials, and provenance all carry value independent of a signature. Many 18th-century American furniture pieces are unsigned but command high prices based on documented regional origin. A signature boosts value and attribution confidence but is not a prerequisite for collectability.
What’s the difference between a maker’s mark and a hallmark?
A maker’s mark identifies the individual silversmith, potter, or workshop responsible for the piece. A hallmark is the official guarantee mark applied by an assay office certifying metal purity. British silver carries both. American silver typically carries a maker’s mark only, since the US has no national assay system.
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