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bumblebee

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Everything posted by bumblebee

  1. Sweet. It must be prototype pelt month!
  2. Black bananas are gross! I prefer yellow and ripe, with light brown mottling.
  3. Wow, nice! I would have outbid two of the winning bids, but of course the winners would have outbid me anyway.
  4. I noticed a lot of handmades went for under low estimate. I should have bid!
  5. bumblebee

    Jorkscrew?

    Definitely a Jabo Akro
  6. Freeze dried Mountain House Chicken Stew with a best-by date of October 2015. Can't let this prepper gear go to waste!
  7. Got mine too. Sweet and minty, but now I find myself craving more Sparkler variety.
  8. We saw five or six nice streaks, even in the brightly lit California suburbs .
  9. I will take lot 5 assuming still available.
  10. Surprising how little action this thread has seen, but then again I would not have looked here had I not read Steph's advice in the other thread to look in Buy & Sell!
  11. I always pronounced it Veetro, and indeed that is the American pronunciation for in vitro (Latin for 'in glass'), but the veterans at the show were saying Vittro so peer pressure trumped instinct.
  12. Oddly enough somebody was selling a few of these locally in Southern California as part of their "vintage" collection. They might have been unwitting victims of the eBay sellers.
  13. I am interested to see how these auctions continue doing in light of supply and demand. For me personally, I have no interest in "same run" Sparklers (at least not at market prices) because I prefer variety. But practically speaking, my pockets aren't deep enough to win Sparklers at current market prices, so I am more the jackal outside the kill, hoping the lions eat themselves to sleep so I can get scraps.
  14. I think most here would agree that two or more machine made marbles manufactured one after another is a run. Subjectively speaking, I say it remains a run until one or more variables alter the appearance of the marbles coming off the rollers to the point where the human eye can detect a consistent difference. So if JABO makes 1 million clear industrial marbles, it's a run insofar as they all look the same to us. But if midway in the process Joe's watch slips off into a glass tank, then there will be a brief "Joe's Timex" run. If Akro Agate was able to precisely control all of the variables of the manufacturing process, especially the variables in big quantities of raw materials used in the glass recipes, then theoretically they could have produced Sparklers a year apart but which to a collector's eye look like the same "run" (or batch). But I consider that a very tall order given the complexities of a Sparkler marble. Think of just some of the variables that could alter one or more aspects of a marble's appearance: temperature, equipment wear and maintenance, employee skill and error, and especially those mass quantities of raw ingredients and the recipes. Think of those variables influencing the look of a Sparkler. It sure as heck ain't no Prize Name.
  15. Of course there are "same runs" in the sense that large batches of marbles were produced from the same batch of colored glasses.
  16. Sweet! Those are rare...I still haven't found a proper hand faceted banded blue or green.
  17. Once PM is working on your account, it will be like a Wal-Mart Black Friday opening day with Sparkler fans rushing the doors...
  18. Try this link? http://marbleconnection.com/index.php?app=members&module=messaging&section=send&do=form
  19. bumblebee

    Agates

    I sometimes get agates that do not appear to have facets, but which in color and design look similar to hand-faceted agates. According to http://marbleconnection.com/topic/20580-carskadden-and-gartleys-chapter-on-agates/ agates that were left polishing long enough could come out without facets, and even some of the earlier agates were mill ground (but likely not with as high a polish). I'm wondering whether anyone has found agates that look vintage but which lack facets, or in my case, one that appears to have none except a few faint ones on both poles under a loupe. On the other hand, a truly hand-faceted one is unmistakable in sunlight and with the old thumbnail test.
  20. I guess I may be striking out in MT as well. When I last visited up there I met a 10-yo boy who is a trapper by trade (no joke!) but he had recently started collecting marbles. I sent him a filled show-off tray with a complete ID guide. I consider it an investment in building the next generation of collectors.
  21. That gives me a great idea...I could buy clays up by the hundreds and then hand draw fancy designs on them with markers!
  22. Like 30 hours...dang. Regardless, I am thinking my chances of finding older marbles will increase in Montana and its surrounding areas.
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