Search
New On Beadwork
My books on Amazon:

 

 

 

Press & Partnerships

As seen on CraftGossip.com

 

Sponsors
New free patterns:

Leather and Bead Wrap Bracelet TutorialLeather and Bead Wrap Bracelet

Beaded Amulet Bag PatternMini Beaded Amulet Bag with Fringe

Cute Twin Bead Daisy Chains

Fiesta Twin and Crystal Bead Earrings

Spring Twin and Seed Bead Bracelet Pattern

Shamrock Square Stitch or Loom Beading Pattern

Loom Beaded Bracelet

Vintage Style Cagework Pendant

Crystal Hexagon Earrings

Netted Tila Necklace

Easy Tila Ladder Bracelet

Hexagon Stitch Bracelet

Twisted Tubular Herringbone Slider

Project archive

Project tweets

Archive
« Cadmium in jewelry - more to think about | Main | Enter a jewelry or beading design contest this year »
Thursday
Jan142010

Cadmium in jewelry - bad

There's good news and bad news this week from the imported metal jewelry front. The good news is that American laws restricting the occurance of lead in jewelry -- especially kids' jewelry -- seem to be succeeding in decreasing the use of lead in jewelry parts. The bad news is that some Chinese manufacturers are using carcinogenic cadmium instead.

Photo Crushed Metal by tanakawho on Flickr.

Cadmium?! The last time I dealt with cadmium, I was performing environmental health audits for manufacturing facilities at a military installation. I honestly had no idea cadmium would be used to make jewelry components.

According to the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Organization (OSHA):

Cadmium is an extremely toxic metal commonly found in industrial workplaces, particularly where any ore is being processed or smelted. Due to its low permissible exposure limit (PEL), overexposures may occur even in situations where trace quantities of cadmium are found in the parent ore or smelter dust. . . . Cadmium is also present in the manufacture of some types of batteries. Cadmium emits a characteristic brown fume (CdO) upon heating. . . .

The Associated Press reports that cadmium is also "shiny, strong and malleable at low temperatures . . . . [a]nd it's cheap." That apparently explains why some Chinese manufacturers are using it.

To date Walmart and Claires have pulled jewelry inventory that may be affected. We'll see if any other retailers follow suit.

Should handmade jewelry crafters be concerned about this? I don't know for sure. But I suspect you can protect yourself by using simple common sense:

  • Only purchase raw materials from reputable suppliers.
  • Understand that the material referred to as "base metal" or "pot metal" is always potentially suspect because it is an alloy (mixture) of different types of cheap metals in varying proportions; it typically requires a lab test to confirm exactly what's in it.
  • If a component is labeled as being made from base metal, ask the supplier whether it has been lab tested for cadmium, lead, or other toxic materials -- or simply avoid buying base metal altogether.
  • Avoid purchasing large, odd lots of metal components from unfamiliar suppliers on eBay or other marketplace sites.

Now that's it's been identified, this crazy use of cadmium should start to get under control. But it makes you wonder what they'll try to throw at us next.

Reader Comments (1)

cadmium can stay in our bodies for decades. In addition, if people touch the jewelry when they are eating they can ingest cadmium....

Glass Of Venice

March 24, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterGlass Of Venice
Comments for this entry have been disabled. Additional comments may not be added to this entry at this time.