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jormibnut

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Posts posted by jormibnut

  1. The master marble #6 boxes were very good fakes. The only thing that gave them away was that the copies were made on new cardboard which was almost pure white on the inside. It wouldn't be hard to steam the glue off an original box and then spread it out and scan the outside onto a piece of cardboard. I fell for one a few years ago. Very good reproduction. Art

  2. Those are really neat items Lisa. I think they were used to button lady's shoes when shoes had buttons.

    :Party_fest30:

    Those are both exceptionally nice buttonhooks with faceted stone agates. Most of the ones that you see just have a claw holding the marble. Figural ones are much more rare.

    You used them on the old shoes by slipping the hook through the eye of the shoe, hooking it around the button, and pulling the button back through the eye.

    Damn .......I'm showing my age. LOL Art

  3. This box is on the block at Morphy's. It appears to be one which was pictured in an IAMC show report, maybe 3 years ago. Only the lid was shown in the show thread though.

    Wondering if there is any extra info available about the background of this particular box. Wjhat I know at the moment is general info suggesting an arrangement between Albright and CAC. They were both in Ohio of course. In 1933, Albright was selling 2 color glass agates wholesale in bags of 500 for $1. Also, clay marbles are found together with CAC's in the CAC Favorite Marble Assortment boxes. Pretty sure Albright was the clay marble maker while CAC was in business.

    Albright_CAC_2009_Morphy.jpg

    I know that Albright was a clay marble supplier, I had a bag of 1000 some years ago. Art

  4. There are quite a number of different design stained glass boxes, both the small ones that held 25 marbles and the larger gift sets.

    None of the marble companies made them, they were ordered from companies who made boxes to order. Could you really see cardboard boxes being made in a marble factory with all of the ovens going? They'd have all burned down.

    In addition to Akro who used the most, Peltier and Master Marble used them. I also suspect that some of the "jobbers" like Pressman and Gropper probably put other makers marbles in some and wholesaled them.

    The designs were popular in the late 1920's and early 1930's when Art Deco was all the rage. Art

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