
1. Recently a customer brought us a broken sterling butter dish. She told us it had been repaired several times and she was worried it soon would be unrepairable if it kept breaking. See red circled area. The break was jagged and uneven.

2. After trying to fit the broken part where it came off it was also obvious it had deformed as the old repair seam broke. I explained it takes longer to repair something that I have to reshape as I rewelded the seam. I also explained I would need to use a new sterling alloy that contained 5% platinum to do her job. It is available from Rio Grande in 30 gauge size.

3. Upon examining the bottom the old solder joint was very obvious. I asked the customer if the top looked perfect could I add reinforcement bars to the bottom. I was concerned because the sterling was so thin that even welding wouldn’t hold it. She approved the sterling reinforcement bars. She now expected to pay more than her previous repairs had cost, because I had to weld, straighten, weld, and straighten until the bent joint was repaired then add three reinforcement bars to make it rigid enough that it wouldn’t break again. She was happy to pay $125.00 for the 40 minute repair.