IndianSanskriti

If you are planning to visit a pawn shop with your silverware, keep these facts in mind: How do I sell my silver flatware? - Silver Superstore

"That’s the base metal," he explained. "Most pawn shops won't buy silver-plated flatware. We look for the word or the number '925' stamped on the back. Sterling is 92.5% pure silver and has 'melt value.' Your set is mostly copper or nickel with a silver coating thinner than a human hair. It’s impossible for us to extract that silver profitably." "So it's worthless?"

Sarah found it in the back of her grandmother’s attic: a velvet-lined mahogany chest, heavy enough to make her arms ache. Inside sat a gleaming 50-piece set of ornate flatware. She had seen "sterling silver" prices online and imagined the chest was a down payment on her new car.

"Not quite," he replied. "While most pawn shops pass on it, a few might pay about just for the base metal scrap. Your best bet is an antique dealer who might want the pattern, or selling it yourself to someone who needs a replacement piece for their own set."

Sarah’s heart sank. "But it's so heavy! And it looks exactly like the expensive stuff."

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