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bumblebee

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Posts posted by bumblebee

  1. Seems more flattened on one side (the one with the decoration), although there are a lot of large flakes that have taken it out of round elsewhere, but definitely squished/flattened on that one side. I would be tempted to say the face was once a door knob, but the backside has nothing to mount such with. It came in a lot with some very old marbles like a banded agate, and a couple of large Benningtons.

    Edit: Maybe was something like these door knobs (since converted into wine stoppers)

    post-1926-0-46849400-1354161041_thumb.jp

  2. Most of the exotic marbles pictured in this post do not look any more exotic or less contemporary than these examples which have been machine made in the last 8 or so years:

    http://www.glassartists.org/Gal13756_2005_10.asp

    http://www.glassartists.org/Gal34122_2008-09.asp

    http://www.glassartists.org/Gal34288_2008-10.asp

    Do we really believe that the CAC glass artists thought these perfectly flawless and amazing marbles were junk and ritually buried them rather than sell them (or keep them), and then kept focusing on making swirls and the occasional guineas because the little boys would never like such amazing and colorful marbles?

  3. Part of joining a club ("marble collectors") is fitting in, at least for me. That means imitating to fit in and to learn. So I caught on immediately that Akro and CAC were hot. When I dug through my first lot, it contained several minty Vitro black lines with gorgeously vivid colors. My eye was pleased, but my brain intruded like a nagging step-mother, "But those aren't CAC or Akro. What's more, they're not that old."

    I remember when I found my first Popeye, I felt I had arrived. It was like a merit badge. But I was not all that excited about the marble itself. My excitement had more to do with its present monetary value and its scarcity, rather than its aesthetic qualities.

    Now I've matured and learned that while scarce might mean valuable, it doesn't necessarily mean beautiful. To really collect what you enjoy you sort of have to not care what others think and become like a child, who knows nothing of the value or the history, and just enjoy them for what they are. Your eye will grow keen and the nagging step mother won't interfere with you anymore.

    So yeah, I've got some nice Popeyes I'd be happy to trade at the next marble show for Vitros...oh wait, hardly anyone brings Vitros to the marble shows... ;)

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