Lead Database

Yellow flower pattern glass Nuk baby bottle purchased on Amazon, 2021: 20,300 ppm lead by XRF
XRF readings: Lead: 20,300 ppm · Cadmium: 200 ppm · Arsenic: not measured Verdict: Very high, avoid food contact 20,300 ppm lead detected. at this concentration leaching into acidic foods (tomato, citrus, vinegar) becomes a realistic concern even in well-fired ware. Children should not handle this item. FluoroSpec will confirm whether lead is surface-reactive. Also: 200 ppm cadmium present. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters is whether the lead can actually reach a person. Think... Read more...
Paper Airplane pattern glass NUK brand baby bottle purchased on Amazon in 2021: 14,600 ppm lead by XRF
XRF readings: Lead: 14,600 ppm · Cadmium: 100 ppm · Arsenic: not measured Verdict: Very high, avoid food contact 14,600 ppm lead detected. at this concentration leaching into acidic foods (tomato, citrus, vinegar) becomes a realistic concern even in well-fired ware. Children should not handle this item. FluoroSpec will confirm whether lead is surface-reactive. Also: 100 ppm cadmium present. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters is whether the lead can actually reach a person. Think... Read more...
Painted logo and markings on Lansinoh mOmma glass bottles contain high Lead paint (at levels considered unsafe for children)
XRF readings: Lead: not measured · Cadmium: 42 ppm · Arsenic: not measured Verdict: Lead-free per XRF No lead detected by XRF. FluoroSpec test will confirm no surface lead reactivity. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters is whether the lead can actually reach a person. Think of tacks: a box of them in a drawer is fine, the same tacks loose on the kitchen floor are not. Lead locked in a stable fired glaze is... Read more...
Unlike the glass, plastic Lansinoh bottles are Lead-free — Click through for full XRF test results (trace Cadmium found in the silicone nipples)
XRF readings: Lead: data not on file · Cadmium: 0 ppm · Arsenic: 173 ppm Verdict: Lead-free per XRF This Unlike the glass, plastic Lansinoh bottles are Lead-free — Click through for full XRF test results (trace Cadmium found in the silicone nipples) carries a Lead-free per XRF verdict in the EverythingLead dataset. Numeric XRF data is not on file for this entry. What this XRF reading actually means → XRF measures lead presence on the surface. It does not measure whether that lead can reach a person. That distinction... Read more...
4 oz clear glass evenflo baby bottle
XRF readings: Lead: not measured · Cadmium: 10 ppm · Arsenic: not measured Verdict: Lead-free per XRF No lead detected by XRF. FluoroSpec test will confirm no surface lead reactivity. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters is whether the lead can actually reach a person. Think of tacks: a box of them in a drawer is fine, the same tacks loose on the kitchen floor are not. Lead locked in a stable fired glaze is... Read more...
Hevea Leaded Baby Bottle Infographic to Share: 90 ppm lead by XRF
XRF readings: Lead: 90 ppm · Cadmium: not measured · Arsenic: not measured Verdict: Low-elevated, below most adult thresholds 90 ppm lead, above the 90 ppm CPSC children's item threshold but well below levels that cause obvious alarm for adult use. For a children's item this is already over the regulatory limit. FluoroSpec gives the definitive surface answer: glow = reactive lead present, no glow = not in accessible form. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What... Read more...
Washington State rubberized magnet: 9,100 ppm Lead. 90 ppm (& up) is unsafe for kids. Magnets are not considered to be children’s items.
XRF readings: Lead: 9100 ppm · Cadmium: 0 ppm · Arsenic: 783 ppm Verdict: High: FluoroSpec test required This Washington State rubberized magnet: 9,100 ppm Lead. 90 ppm (& up) is unsafe for kids. Magnets are not considered to be children’s items. tested at 9100 ppm lead, significantly elevated. The bioavailability question (can this lead reach a person?) depends on whether the lead is locked into a fired matrix or sitting on a painted surface. Arsenic reads 783 ppm, worth noting on top of the lead question. What this XRF... Read more...
California rubberized magnet: 67,300 ppm lead by XRF
XRF readings: Lead: 67,300 ppm · Cadmium: 5,200 ppm · Arsenic: 57 ppm Verdict: Extreme, do not use + High cadmium 67,300 ppm lead, roughly 6x the CPSC 90 ppm children's limit. At this concentration, even fired ceramic glaze carries leaching risk under acidic food conditions. No food contact under any circumstances. FluoroSpec will glow. NOTE: 5,200 ppm cadmium also detected, a separate and serious concern for colored glazes. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters... Read more...
Foam cushion inserts from popular “non-toxic” Los Angeles-based sofa brand test positive for Lead & Arsenic. This product is marketed as “Lead-free.”
XRF readings: Lead: 4000 ppm · Cadmium: 22 ppm · Arsenic: 8 ppm Verdict: High: FluoroSpec test required This Foam cushion inserts from popular “non-toxic” Los Angeles-based sofa brand test positive for Lead & Arsenic. This product is marketed as “Lead-free.” tested at 4000 ppm lead, significantly elevated. The bioavailability question (can this lead reach a person?) depends on whether the lead is locked into a fired matrix or sitting on a painted surface. What this XRF reading actually means → XRF measures lead presence on the surface. It does... Read more...
Is there Lead paint on the outside of my “Jervis & George” reusable glass baby food container: 5,000 ppm lead by XRF
XRF readings: Lead: 5,000 ppm · Cadmium: 155 ppm · Arsenic: not measured Verdict: High, FluoroSpec test required 5,000 ppm lead detected by XRF. This item is at or above the boundary where ceramic lead can begin to behave differently under acidic conditions. Children should not use this item. FluoroSpec is the actionable test: glow = retire it, no glow = lower risk. Also: 155 ppm cadmium present. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters is... Read more...
It’s not just paint! Stain can have Lead too! Interior 1905 door: 987 ppm lead by XRF
XRF readings: Lead: 987 ppm · Cadmium: not measured · Arsenic: 157 ppm Verdict: Low-elevated, below most adult thresholds 987 ppm lead, above the 90 ppm CPSC children's item threshold but below levels that cause obvious alarm for adult use. For a children's item this is already over the regulatory limit. FluoroSpec gives the definitive surface answer: glow = reactive lead present, no glow = not in accessible form. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters... Read more...
Silicone Push Pop Bubble Fidget — Rainbow Frosted Cup Cake Design
XRF readings: Lead: not measured · Cadmium: 18 ppm · Arsenic: not measured Verdict: Lead-free per XRF No lead detected by XRF. FluoroSpec test will confirm no surface lead reactivity. There is no safe amount of lead. This number is a starting point, not a verdict on your safety. What matters is whether the lead can actually reach a person. Think of tacks: a box of them in a drawer is fine, the same tacks loose on the kitchen floor are not. Lead locked in a stable fired glaze is... Read more...