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psia-antique

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Everything posted by psia-antique

  1. Gosh, just yesterday, you assumed ill of me. I have watched you create your silly little dramas for years and I believe you stirred the pot on purpose. If I am wrong, do please tell why you posted your vile venom over there rather than on your "home board"?
  2. Duff, somebody with 1076 feedbacks already bid on that marble.
  3. Michael, I don't believe you because I learned from Steph and Galen what you is saying isn't true! I know who you are! I know where you live!If you don't want me to, I won't tell everyone that you were apartner in a couple of runs with Steph and Duffy. Wait! Since you didn't try to copy anyone and our group didn't, it must have been Steph and her JABO buds.
  4. from Poor Richards Almanac "Breaking news for JABO lovers! April 8, 2010 Posted by ourfriendben in wit and wisdom. Tags: Dave McCullough, David McCullough, JABO, JABO marbles, marble collecting, marbles, Steve Sturtz 4 comments Attention, marble lovers and collectors everywhere: Here’s a scoop on today’s hottest machine-made marbles, JABOs. Remember, you read it here first! Around midnight last night, a shadowy figure who, in keeping with our blog’s Colonial tone, prefers to be known only as Paul Revere,* rode up to Hawk’s Haven, our friend Ben’s and Silence Dogood’s cottage home, swinging his lantern and shouting “The JABOs are coming! The JABOs are coming!!!” Lurching groggily to the door, our friend Ben opened it to be hit with a faceful of dust from the rapidly advancing hooves of the noted silversmith’s horse as he reined to a halt and swung off his steed. Once sight was restored, OFB, still coughing slightly, invited Paul inside. “Silence! It’s Paul Revere! Would you bring us some ale, please? I’ll be starting up the fire in the living room.” No slouch, Silence was at the living room door with two brimming mugs of ale before you could say “Lexington and Concord.” “Paul, what’s going on? Don’t tell me the British are at it again!” Turns out, it was even more momentous news, at least as far as marble-lovers are concerned. Here’s what Paul told us: “While I was resting over a tankard in Marietta, I overheard Joe, the postal worker from Wells Fargo, tell a wonderfully exciting story of a JABO marble run that is about to take place. The story was told to him by a generally unreliable old cur of a hound, but for once he had some of the facts. “I edged closer to hear the full scoop. It appears that the JABO Tributes were given the chance to do a 1″ run at JABO.** He said that this will be the first and maybe the only 1″ run in 3 years. Everyone at his table shouted ‘No!’ and ‘Impossible!’, so I didn’t hear what he said next, but as the table quieted down, I heard him say something about how huge the costs would be. The base glass will be custom-batched, with some extra glass added for another group to run smaller marbles. “The whole table was in an uproar by this time, so I left the inn with the idea that even though Joe had some of the specifics, there was more to this story… “ “Speaking of leaving the inn, Paul, I see that your mug is empty. Care for a refill?” “Thank’ee, Silence, don’t mind if I do. Riding these dusty backroads every midnight shouting the news is mighty thirsty work. Now, where was I? Oh, yes… “I walked around the town and talked to the usual supporters in the area. Still, the information was sketchy at best, so I decided to go straight to the horse’s mouth, so to speak. Did you say something, Ben?” “Me? Not a word, Paul. Please go on!” “Hmpf. Well, I raced to the blacksmith shop where my horse was tethered for the night and I galloped the 7 miles to Reno, Ohio. My steed was tired and I, excited. I spoke with David McCullough himself,*** and he completed the story. “According to David, the amount of base glass per marble will be 2 1/2 times that used to make a 3/4″ marble, because the surface area of a 1″ marble is 2 1/4 times that of a 3/4″ marble.” “Then why won’t the amount of base glass be 2 1/4 times as much instead of 2 1/2 times?” “Ben, I’m a silversmith, not a marble-maker! You’ll have to ask David that question yourself. But if he said it, I’m sure it’s true.” “I agree with you there, Paul! David is as great a marble-maker as you were, ah, are a silversmith, for sure. Maybe there’s some evaporation involved or something.” “Slept through chemistry class, eh, Ben?” “Shut up, Silence. Paul, you were saying?” “According to David, the gold aventurine will cost about $15,000—” “WHAT?!!!” “Ben, did you think making premium marbles was cheap? Think about it: Between the cost of materials, the cost of buying, maintaining, and running the equipment, and the priceless expertise involved in creating these masterworks, maybe you can see why collectors invest thousands of dollars in their collections. It’s not like we’re talking about, say, scribbling away on a computer.” “GRRRRRR… “ “Ben!!!” “Uh, sorry, Silence, Paul. Just clearing a little road dust out of my throat. Paul, you were saying?” “Right. The gold aventurine will cost about $15,000, and then the gold Lutz rod will be about $500 per kilo, and many kilos will be used. The total cost of this run will be 2 to 3 times more than any 3/4″ run to date. Apparently, the Tributes have gathered most of the money and are planning on a mid- to late-May run. The name they have chosen for this unique run is ‘What a Tribute!’ It sure looks like David McCullough will have all the materials he wants to set still another standard of excellence in marble-making.” “So what does David think about the run, Paul?” “The rumor is that David is very excited about this run and was overheard to say with a huge smile and a wink, ‘We’ll make you some real pretty marbles.’ “Will JABO collectors like us be able to watch the marbles being made, Paul?” “You betcha, Ben. Tributes from the four corners of the continent will assemble at the JABO factory in Reno, Ohio, to watch these beautiful marbles being made. It’s a great opportunity to be a part of marble history, just like I became part of American history. “So, Ben and Silence, I hope you’re as excited about this development as I am. I will keep watch over the proceedings and inform you of any new developments. So au revoir for now! I must take to horse and return to Marietta to keep an eye on things.” Leaping onto his long-suffering—I mean, trusty—steed, the last we saw of Paul Revere was his retreating form, trailed by the echo of “The JABOS are coming!” * The modest personage wishing to be known simply as Paul Revere, and bearing no resemblance whatever to the “generally unreliable old cur of a hound” of his story, might nonetheless be known to the cognoscenti by his alter-ego, JABO’s principle historian, aka Dr. JABO. ** For those new to the wide and wild world of marble collecting, three explanations are due here. First, marbles are made in numerous sizes, but machine-made marbles are typically made in 1/2, 3/4, and 1-inch sizes. Second, marble production typically occurs in “runs,” so-called because the machines are fired up, the glass and other materials are shoveled in, and the marbles are produced in a single stretch of time and at full tilt, with everyone running to complete that batch of marbles until the raw materials run out. And third, if you’re wondering why these particular collectors are referred to by Paul Revere as “Tributes,” it’s because they collect and finance the Tribute runs that David McCullough has produced for JABO. *** David McCullough is not only the presiding genius responsible for the creation of JABO marbles, arguably the hottest collectibles in the marble field today, but is almost certainly the greatest creator of machine-made marbles who ever lived."
  5. I heard they can be made and assure you they have been discussed.
  6. I bought one on eBay for $15 within the last couple of months.
  7. This doesn't bother me either. I am irritated when CAC exotics are listed as pre 70.
  8. Beri Fox will be the guest speaker at the Texas Marble Club's spring show. She will speak after dinner on Friday April 30, 2010. If I am not mistaken, this will be the first time Beri has spoken to a marble club. Congrats to Edna "Spikey" and the board on a job well done. I look forward to hearing every word Beri will share with all in attendence
  9. Gosh, I am sorry you didn't understand my post. I was laughing at myself because I don't understand calulus and didn't back in the day either.
  10. We is a grammar error here.We aren't getting into calulus, they are. We who don't understand calculus are asking for the answers from those who do. I even heard that once upon a time, you could go out your way and find MBA programs without calulus.
  11. Neat stuff. I get what has been said and appreciate the same. One question still...Jumbos...how do two 1" marbles equal 1 1/16 to 1 3/8 ?...and I've watched them being made...bottom line why don't 1"+1" = 2"
  12. You are probably correct because your calculator has a Higher Power.
  13. withonly 8 or 9 fingers for counting, the relationship between 3/4 and 1" looks to me to be 3 or 4 to 1...no real clue what it is though.
  14. Cool...how about 3/4 TO 1" AND 5/8 TO 1"? Need to know? fun trivia Have often wondered about this because when 2 1" mibs wereput together to make a Jumbo they came out between 1&1/16 to 1&3/8, but most were at the small end of the scale...
  15. Too pretty to be a CAC and it looks to be 5 colors so very probably not a CAC. Wrong pattern for a Pelt...JABO SUPERMAN 2003.
  16. Rookie, Terrible guess! Those marbles are too pretty to be CACs!
  17. I can say I was banned there , but only after I quit three times! Kevin is a little slow on the details. I am shocked to see Kevin has ban every one. I thought that besides me only facts, polysyllabic words, and grammar were banned over there.
  18. Thank you Galen! You have, with that picture,proven how pretty JABOs are. We all know they are rarer than CACs and best of all if there are "CACs" in that picture then they are exotics and as we all know, the exotics are not CAC. Thanks again.
  19. In the recent past you have told us thar JABO uses single stream machine...they do not and you were even at the factory for a run and should know better. Remember the coffee can of fritt you dumped in a crucible. Well that was the second stream and we both there were more. Recently, you told us if we wanted to be up on the hobby the place to come for the knowledge is the chat boards. I propose that if you read more of the literature you probably would know that MFC bought his ox formula from a third generation glass maker....a third generation American glass maker. AND now, you want us to believe that oxblood, the term as used in the common language of marbles ia a "kind of glass". Have I missed something else? The books I read say oxblood, the term as commonly used in marbles is the name of a color that was assigned by children who played with them. Anywhere I have read this about the origins of the the term, I have not heard it discussed as a manufacturing process, but as a color...NOT a "kind of glass."
  20. Just responding to Alan, but I guess it should have been to all.
  21. I agree with alan. why not keep it simple and just call it oxblood.
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