Crestfinder seems to have tapped into a rich vein of public interest.
The popularity of the Family Heritage industry is well known in the UK but it is remarkable how many enquiries we are getting every day from visitors around the world (particularly in the US) seeking to identify their Family Crest.
I think the fascination stems from a human desire to visualise a surname as an image - a trotting horse for the Trotters, for instance! To then discover a piece of silver engraved with your Family Crest is deeply satisfying - and tempting!
Crestfinder currently only identifies British source crests, but over time more and more records on European and American heraldry will be added, allowing for the building 0f the world’s biggest online database for crest identification!
In the meantime, subscribe to our newsletter for updates and our team of researchers will respond whenever possible to specific crest enquiries.
To celebrate its return to our screens, I thought it would be fun to trace the crests of the celebrities profiled in the current series of BBC’s popular programme Who do You Think You Are? Beginning this week with Rory Bremner. According to Crestfinder, the Bremner family crest is A Cock’s Head Erased – very appropriate for a well loved entertainer!
Are there any celebrities crests you’d like us to search for?

Another mystery crest deciphered.
The second mystery crest I saw recently at the Miami Beach Antiques Show was on every piece of this lovely eighteenth century porcelain breakfast set.
Without a motto, this was a slightly tougher challenge than the crest on the antique silver tureen covers I examined previously. Looking at the image, my instinct was that the principal feature on the porcelain was some sort of hawk holding what looked like a snake. You might agree:

However, Crestfinder drew a blank using these search terms. There were loads of hawks (248 to be precise) but none with a snake like this. The closest fit was a hawk holding a wheatsheaf:

As you can see, this crest relates to five families. But I was not happy - maybe I was being too hawkish (boo!). So turning to doves, I searched again. This time, I found a better fit: a dove (with less hairy legs than the hawk) holding a snake for the Elphinston family of Scotland:

One interesting reminder of this search is that the porcelain set was probably decorated in the Far East with the artist working, not from our nice neat source Fairbairns, but from his client’s description. Hence, a variation in the exact depiction of the crest, although the elements and their arrangement are correct. I think this is our answer, so once again Crestfinder has resurrected the hidden history of a work of art.