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Ric

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Everything posted by Ric

  1. Peach Rose, yup, I just made that up.
  2. Steph, I am confident this is natural stone - no color added. And I am pretty sure it was not made on a modern sphere machine. Hopefully, someone with knowledge of minerals and old stone marbles will chime in. Can you think of anyone who might be able to help?
  3. The glass would probably pop out of those chips if you grind it, so if they are deep enough such that rounding the marble to the deepest point would get into the core, it may not be possible to restore it by polishing. In that case, perhaps someone good with a torch would try?
  4. Here it is with some stoneware.
  5. That's an odd one, Darla - pretty.
  6. The resemblance to some clay and crockery marbles is remarkable, which is why I laid hands on it in the first place. I pulled it from a large case of stoneware marbles. I remember it was filthy. Unfortunately, I don't recall where I was - might have been Amana. Could it be an archetypal marble marble? I do not recall this many colors on the few I have had in hand. Here is some detail. It even has a little sparkle in it.
  7. Ric

    Tonights Moon

    That is a beautiful shot - remarkable clarity!
  8. I found this quite a few years ago. When I first picked it up I was thinking crockery - but no, it's stone (~ 1 1/4"). The colors are great. Some of them are similar to those found in variegated clay Jaspers (white, blue, green, pink), but there are also black, gray, brown and yellow tones (the dark brown in the upper right shot looks like a stain). Overall, it's pretty round, but there are quite a few "flat" spots on it (a wobbly roller). Does anyone have experience with these types or similar to show? It's quite a bit more colorful than the Blood Allies and other marble marbles I have seen. Any info or thoughts will be appreciated. Cheers!
  9. That might be a Honey Bee. At least, I think that's the name - amber base with yellow ribbons.
  10. It does resemble a JABO lawn chair. But about the only thing I can say with confidence is that it's not a chalky.
  11. What a tragedy. I am so sorry for your loss, Derrick. I can only imagine how hard it must be for you. Hang in there, man. Lots of people are pulling for you.
  12. The white based St. Mary's Alleys are remarkably common, and white-based swirls are pretty common in general. In many cases, pulling them from a bag is the only way you will produce an iron-clad ID. A lot of them are difficult to distinguish, even side-by-side.
  13. I don't think I see Oxblood either. I would lean Champion for an ID - the wide (but thin) stripes in your last pic lead me there.
  14. Well this is interesting. The bottom marble is offered on EBay by Bob Block but the top marble is offered by keithmichelle1 out of Dallas - pretty odd.
  15. Slightly more crude than Masataka's, which is absolutely beautiful.
  16. With just one view of the first, I am not convinced it's Peltier.
  17. It reminded me of these - attributed to Champion, I think, but not uv-reactive.
  18. Be careful with tape. If you want to repair it, archival paper tabs and paper glue would probably be better. George's box repair articles would be a good read, for sure.
  19. The Vaseline glass with red striping is unusual. It'd be a sweet Peltier Sunset. The bubbles are right but I think that's a fold and not a seam - and uranium glass? It also seems to have some furnace debris. Can't blame Bill for a little wistful thinking though, he loves those oddball Pelts. It could be some kind of Euro swirl, I guess. I would like to see it in hand. Please let me know if you want to part with it - it's a pretty one.
  20. Phantom Conquerors usually have more of the white filaments in and under the clear base glass, though.
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