Lead: 2,528 ppm · Cadmium: 78 ppm · Arsenic: not measured
2,528 ppm lead by XRF. Independent leach testing on similar ceramics in this range (up to 3,000 ppm) found no detectable lead migration into food simulant, lead baked into fired glaze is chemically bound and doesn't readily dissolve. This is the key context missing from most XRF-only reporting. That said, children are a different calculus, no safe level applies. FluoroSpec test: if it doesn't glow, the lead is not in surface-reactive form.
What XRF actually measures (and what it doesn't)
XRF detects elemental lead presence on the surface. It does not measure whether that lead migrates into food. Those are different questions. Lead bound in fired ceramic glaze is chemically locked in the vitreous matrix and, in independent leach testing on items up to ~3,000 ppm, showed no detectable migration. Lead in surface paint, decals, or worn glaze behaves very differently and is a meaningful exposure risk.
What this XRF reading actually means →
Test your own dishes with FluoroSpec →
Source data: independent consumer-safety researcher (factual data; verdict by EverythingLead)
Original source: https://tamararubin.com/2018/11/plain-white-ceramic-pottery-barn-mug-2528-ppm-lead-on-the-logo/
Test method: XRF (Niton XL 5 Plus, 1.5 sigma)
License: Factual XRF measurements are not copyrightable
(Feist v. Rural Tel., 499 U.S. 340). Verdict and methodology CC-BY-SA 4.0.