Jump to content

bumblebee

Admin
  • Posts

    4160
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    3

Posts posted by bumblebee

  1. From what I remember playing marbles, the thrill was based in the scarcity of good marbles and the fair chance to win or lose them.

    There was some sort of important lesson in loving a small beautiful thing that you won while at the same time knowing you could lose it some day. Perhaps knowing that you could win it back, or even win a better one the next day, made letting go of it that much easier.

    There was also that mystery of the older marbles that some kids had. They had better colors and patterns, but usually scars. They were like stories and characters from the past who were playing among us.

  2. I've been on an agate kick lately which finally landed me a 7/8"+ faceted blue one. That's the second one I've ever found in 3/4" and above.

    From my experience, the green ones are even harder to find but of course all it takes is one nice score to change those stats.

    On that note, there are some very nice shooter sized machine-ground blue and green bullseye agates that I believe are from Brazil and are definitely older. I've always wondered whether German immigrants to Brazil brought their dyeing techniques and quality control to produce those. There was a big surge of German emigration to Brazil in 1920-1929 of 75k people, almost four times the number the decade before and after.

    _DSC0001.jpg

    _DSC0002.jpg

  3. I fantasize about amazing scores. One involves finding a 50-gallon drum filled with marbles at an old picker's homestead.

    The other is discovering an entire railroad car filled with Akro marbles.

    My mind has worked out my strategy how I will sort through these marbles and also how to sell many without over-saturating the market.

    Of course my mind insists these marbles aren't Chinese checkers or clearies. ;)

  4. Bought an awesome lot of agates that included two mineral spheres. The big clear sphere was clearly machine ground, so I assumed the pinkish smaller one was too.

    Then today I looked at it under the loupe and was shocked to find tons of facets just like the real agates. I don't have a macro lens right now so you'll have to trust me. ;)

    Lesson learned: always put a loupe on those mineral spheres as apparently those crafty Germans did make some non-agate ones.

     

    _DSC0012[1].jpgIMG_1143.jpg

     

    quartz.jpg

  5. 2 hours ago, Steph said:

    One of the subjects which brings it up is that Masters can have lashes -- and when people realize that it tends to grow their Master collections.  ^_^

    But I thought it would be fun to see how far we could extend the examples -- to Master and beyond.  

    Are you trying to overturn decades of marble collecting folklore with your new-fangled scientific experiments? 😋

  6. They're BAAAAACK!

    Quote

    This auction is for a rare Robbins, Tennessee Southern Clay Manufacturing Company hand painted clay marble which dates from 1880 to 1937. This clay marble features a mother duck swimming with her ducklings under the sun! You can find historical information about these Robbins, Tennessee  Southern Clay Maufacturing Company clay marbles by searching online. This auction is for 1 marble. You can buy additional Robins County, Tennessee clay marbles in my other auctions. This antique marble is quite rare and I am almost sold out of these marbles. Buyer pays $5 for shipping in the US or $20 for shipping if international.

     

    Clipboard01.jpg

  7. I'm with Schmoozer. I have too many of certain types (like Vitro Tiger Eyes) that I have no practical way of displaying (enjoying) so I want to thin those out and focus on displaying the favorites creatively.

    I'm also thinking of putting all my individually stored "odd ball" marbles into a single container that I can look at all the time. So many weird ones bunched together would be far more interesting to my eyes, though my instinct to not have mint marbles touching may need some coaxing.

×
×
  • Create New...