{
  "url": "https://proudtek.com/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-jewelry-label/",
  "sourceUrl": "https://proudtek.com/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-jewelry-label/",
  "title": "UHF RFID Jewelry Label — Barbell Inventory Tag",
  "description": "UHF RFID jewelry labels are ultra-compact 12×60 mm barbell-style tags that hang from rings, necklaces, bracelets and watches without obscuring the...",
  "kind": "product",
  "imageUrl": "https://proudtek.com/landing-images/uhf-rfid-jewelry-label.jpg",
  "imageAlt": "Luxury rings with gemstones in a jewelry retailer's glass display case — the high-value inventory environment where UHF RFID barbell tags hang from each piece for sub-minute cycle counts, loss prevention, and EAS coexistence",
  "imageGallery": [
    {
      "url": "https://proudtek.com/landing-images/uhf-rfid-jewelry-label.jpg",
      "alt": "Luxury rings with gemstones in a jewelry retailer's glass display case — the high-value inventory environment where UHF RFID barbell tags hang from each piece for sub-minute cycle counts, loss prevention, and EAS coexistence"
    }
  ],
  "breadcrumbs": [
    {
      "name": "Home",
      "url": "https://proudtek.com/"
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    {
      "name": "Products",
      "url": "https://proudtek.com/products/all/"
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    {
      "name": "UHF RFID Jewelry Label — Barbell Inventory Tag",
      "url": "https://proudtek.com/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-jewelry-label/"
    }
  ],
  "summary": [],
  "faq": [
    {
      "question": "Does the barbell tag damage or scratch delicate jewelry?",
      "answer": "No. The barbell tag attaches via a soft, non-abrasive string loop that does not contact the metal or stone surfaces of the jewelry piece. The tag body is made of smooth, rounded plastic with no sharp edges. The string material is tested to be non-reactive with gold, silver, platinum and gemstone surfaces."
    },
    {
      "question": "Can the RFID tag be read through glass display cases?",
      "answer": "Yes. UHF RFID signals pass through glass with minimal attenuation. Our jewelry tags deliver reliable reads at 0.5-2 m through standard glass display cases. For continuous monitoring, small RFID reader antennas can be embedded in the display tray beneath the jewelry for real-time presence detection."
    },
    {
      "question": "How does the system handle customer try-on sessions?",
      "answer": "When an associate removes items from a case for a customer try-on, the tray reader detects the removal and starts a configurable timer. The associate's POS or mobile device shows which items are out on try-on. If all items are returned, the alert clears automatically. If an item is not returned within the time window, the system sends an immediate alert to the associate and store manager."
    },
    {
      "question": "How does RFID jewelry inventory integrate with the Kimberley Process, supply-chain due-diligence frameworks and the EU Conflict Minerals Regulation?",
      "answer": "Jewelry RFID is an inventory-accuracy layer, not a diamond-origin certification layer — but it can carry and cross-reference the origin-certification data that regulators require. The Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS, 81 participating jurisdictions) governs rough-diamond imports and requires a government-issued KP certificate per parcel; our RFID encoding supports a GS1 SGTIN-96 serial that resolves to the KP certificate, Diamond Industry Blockchain (De Beers Tracr, Everledger, IBM Blockchain Transparent Supply) and GIA / HRD / IGI grading reports. For colored gemstones and gold, the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas (Step 1-5) and the EU Conflict Minerals Regulation 2017/821 (tin, tungsten, tantalum, gold — entry into force Jan 2021) apply to upstream importers; our RFID-tagged finished jewelry can link downstream to the upstream 3TG chain-of-custody record via GS1 Digital Link URI. The tag is the identity anchor; the underlying provenance is the customer's responsibility to verify with their supplier, mining certification (Responsible Jewellery Council, SCS-007 emerald standard) and third-party auditors."
    },
    {
      "question": "Does the tag interfere with electronic article surveillance (EAS), and can jewelry RFID replace an existing Sensormatic / Nedap / Checkpoint EAS system?",
      "answer": "EAS (electronic article surveillance) and UHF RFID are complementary, not substitutes. EAS at retail operates on three physics types: acousto-magnetic (AM, Sensormatic, 58 kHz), radio-frequency (RF, Checkpoint, 8.2 MHz) and electromagnetic (EM, legacy libraries) — all narrow-band detection-only technologies that trigger a gate alarm when an unpaid / armed tag passes the pedestal. UHF RFID (860-960 MHz, ISO/IEC 18000-63) carries a unique identifier per item and supports inventory accuracy, but the traditional EAS gate is tuned to a different frequency and physics, so the technologies do not interfere in the same installation. Modern 'EAS + RFID' combined pedestals (Sensormatic Synergy, Nedap !D Top, Checkpoint EVOLVE) read both signals and are increasingly specified for jewelry stores that want to keep the hard-tag EAS deterrent while adding item-level inventory. Our UHF RFID jewelry tag does not replace an AM / RF EAS hard tag — it is additional, and a jewelry store can (a) keep EAS and add RFID inventory (most common), (b) transition fully to RFID if the retailer is willing to rely on RFID read events at the exit pedestal as the loss-prevention trigger (newer deployments), or (c) use only RFID inventory and skip pedestal-based loss prevention entirely (uncommon for high-value jewelry)."
    }
  ],
  "procurementFields": [
    {
      "label": "Best fit",
      "value": "Best for asset tagging, packaging, authentication, access control, and smart-label projects."
    },
    {
      "label": "Key options",
      "value": "Form Factor: Adhesive label format for direct application to objects or packaging."
    },
    {
      "label": "Customization",
      "value": "Confirm artwork, encoding, material, chip, and finish requirements before quoting."
    },
    {
      "label": "Quote checklist",
      "value": "Confirm mounting surface, adhesive or on-metal requirements, and expected reading distance. Adhesive label format for direct application to objects or packaging. Share target chip or protocol, quantity, format or size, print or encoding..."
    }
  ],
  "collectionGuidanceFields": [],
  "coreGuidanceFields": [],
  "articleGuidanceFields": [],
  "sourceLinks": [],
  "related": [],
  "productSpecs": [
    {
      "name": "Form Factor",
      "value": "Adhesive label format for direct application to objects or packaging."
    }
  ],
  "machineJsonUrl": "https://proudtek.com/machine/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-jewelry-label.json",
  "machineTextUrl": "https://proudtek.com/machine/products/rfid-labels/uhf-rfid-jewelry-label.txt",
  "author": {
    "name": "Proud Tek Co., Limited"
  },
  "publisher": "Proud Tek Co., Limited",
  "credentials": [
    "ISO 9001:2015",
    "ISO 14001:2015",
    "RoHS Compliant",
    "CE Marking",
    "REACH Compliant"
  ],
  "generatedAt": "2026-03-16T01:42:30.697Z"
}