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Everything posted by Ric
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Take a look at the second pic . . . see how that fat purple ribbon is actually two ribbons that originate on opposite sides of the seams? The bottom half of the ribbon in that view should be pulled out away from the top half and into all the wispy ones. Then it would look more like you'd expect for a 4-ribbon Rainbo - I'm sticking with Pelt.
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The polar patches and equatorial ribbons sorta switched places.
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It's an attractive color combination and pretty unique too.
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Crazy . . . Black Line All Reds that just couldn't get with the program. lol
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A total guess from me . . . torch-made macrame beads from the 1960s or 70s - Hippie stuff. 🙂 They're very pretty.
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I gotcha, Jeff. And I agree they could all be Alox marbles - just can't get a very good look at them.
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The marbles look Alox, Dave, but the staples don't look flat to me. Flat staples look more like a rectangular steel "bar".
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A little different, but I agree.
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It looks like an odd Peltier Rainbo to me. What size is it?
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Those are Champion NOFs from the 1980s.
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There's nothing like marbles in the sun!
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@akroorka Cool Art, I always like to see glassware and matching marbles - and that's a really great tin too!
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Here is some info and other examples from peltiermarbles.info . . . Superboy - Light blue base, red and yellow ribbons---usually the red lies on top of the yellow. It seems there is a lot of variation in in "Superboys" . . .
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A Superboy is basically a Superman without separate yellow ribbons. The red is usually found on top of the yellow in the same ribbons (looks orange), on a light blue base.
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I agree - probably Chinese.
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It sorta looks like a horizontal swirl. Are the colors right in the photos? Is the base yellow/tan?
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Nice example of an original Alox bag filled with Alox marbles, Jeff. Are the staples in the header the rectangular (flat) type or the round type?
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It looks like a big Rainbo to me.
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Wow, sorta overload - so many marbles at once. The majority are Conqueror types which, as the name suggests, were made in the early to mid 1940s. They are characterized by a polar patch of color and a white body both veneered on transparent base glass. Those that have more filamentous white are known as Phantom Conquerors. The one below is newer and is called a Whitie. The earliest of these are on an opaque white base glass, This later one has the white and colored equatorial ribbons veneered on clear glass like the Conquerors. A couple of them look like they might be foreign Wales types. Beyond this, I recommend you pull a few that look more interesting to you and post them up for further comment. If things get too cumbersome people are less inclined to help. 🙂
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Another great board with beautiful marbles. And I have to say, I was looking forward to your post. 🙂
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Oh yeah, it's a Pelt.
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Cairo and some information pertaining to Davis and Jackson
Ric replied to cheese's topic in General Marble & Glass Chat
This is all interesting, Chuck. And I completely agree about how cautious Ron was with his Davis marbles. He was always worried that he or someone else would get them mixed up with or contaminated with other company's marbles, and with good reason too, Davis marbles with iron clad provenance are very few and far between. I too talked with Ron about the relationship between Cairo and Davis on several occasions. I think there is little doubt that some Davis marbles wound up at Cairo. I also have little doubt that they shared cullet from the same source(s), if not the same truck loads, and that each may have produced marbles that are very similar to one another. As for the relationship between Jackson and Cairo, I don't think it was nearly as strong. Jackson started up before Cairo and quit the business shortly after Cairo started. And while it wouldn't surprise me if a few of Jackson's marbles were found at Cairo, I think Jackson was able to sell most of his own inventory, although, I do think it likely that any significant amounts of cullet remaining after he closed up probably did wind up at Cairo, which might explain how the marbles got there too. Just some thoughts . . . -
it got spun on the rollers so the pattern is a little unusual but I am thinking it's a West Virginia Swirl made by Alley Agate.