
The square, Christofle mark appears to be one of the marks shown in the “Christofle Marks & History” paper referenced in our Library, Articles on Silver, section. The foot note to that image is vague “difficult to date beyond a rough estimation of late 19th to early 20th Century” (that was 2007).
I understand Christofle “absorbed” other companies, so is this where the silversmith’s mark came from or did they have their own silversmiths using personal marks?

It is a very nice spoon with an exaggerated pointed bowl and has a full gold wash. There is even a Bigorne mark on the reverse the 1st Standard Minerva mark. The maker’s mark appears to me to be a central religious “cross” with an “L” beginning to the maker’s second name with “stars” around the illegible, possible “I” start letter of the maker’s first name. I have tried to find a likely maker to date the spoon but without success. Can the Forum offer any enlightenment? I thought the Bigorne mark could have helped dating but I saw a note that suggested those marks were still being used into the 1930’s and I think the spoon is older than that. Do we think this could be a grapefruit spoon? Please can there be clariifaication of the maker's mark and the Christofle mark?
Fishless