Complying with CA’s Prop 65
Posted by Tawny on 09 Feb 2010\em> | Tagged as: glass, silver, rubber, Sundrops impact
The Good News
Lead was the easy one; most items are labeled if they contain lead. Figuring out whether any of the other myriad of proscribed chemicals were present was much more difficult. I spent a few solid days searching the internet, sending emails to the makers of materials we use, and chatting online with the primary middleman from whom we purchase most of our jewelry findings (ear hooks, wire, necklace cord, etc) to get either the list of materials in each item or the maker’s declaration that the item complies with Prop 65. However, I can now happily say that all of our jewelry findings are in compliance with Prop. 65. This does not necessarily mean that they contain no chemicals listed in those 21 pages, it just means that any of those chemicals are present in low enough concentrations to not require a warning label.
That list, by the way? It was rather less helpful than it could be - it doesn’t list what the allowable levels are for each chemical, which was irritating to me from two perspectives:
- as a business owner, it was very difficult to determine whether my product is allowable
- as a person wanting to be protected from these chemicals, I don’t know what levels are considered safe
While our jewelry findings are clean, not all of our glass is. Two of the roughly 20 colors of stained glass we have used contain lead. Lead in glass jewelry is not actually a health hazard to those wearing the jewelry (lead in glass can’t leach the way metallic lead can), although it still has to carry the warning label. The potential health hazard is for us, the people melting the glass. Although the lead is trapped inside the glass when solid, melting releases toxic lead fumes. Even though our glass melting takes place in a well-ventilated space (i.e. outside - concentrated sunlight, remember?
So, our jewelry (except those two discontinued colors) is in compliance with Prop 65, and I’ll be trying out some new lead-free glass colors as soon as the weather improves.
February 11th, 2010 at 3:46 pm
which colors are the ones with lead?
February 11th, 2010 at 4:19 pm
#1311-50F Cranberry and #1215-76F Light Pink Striker Rod, both from Bullseye Glass.