Jump to content

stacyw

Members
  • Posts

    393
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by stacyw

  1. Good Evening,

    Going through some marbles last night, I found this Pelt with two bubbles that looks remarkably like an eye with a tear.

    post-2752-0-89591900-1332294632_thumb.jppost-2752-0-61817100-1332294650_thumb.jp

    Thinking of all the posts about the loss of Alan Basinet, I thought there might be someone who would like this marble as sort of a remembrance of his passing.

    If anyone wants it, please pm me and I will send it at my own expense.

    Stacy

  2. Hi Folks,

    When sorting through a couple of buck Ebay handful, I looked over a plain "black" one to see if it went in the opaque or clearie jar. To my surprise, I spied a faint "9" under the grime. Could it be???

    Yes! Very dark transparent green with an oxblood nine and tail, cutoff line, and horizontal layers of oxblood, white and green.

    Please excuse the quality of the photos. They were taken in a dish of water to make the pattern more visible.

    post-2752-0-10465600-1332112255_thumb.jppost-2752-0-08412500-1332112269_thumb.jppost-2752-0-45537200-1332112288_thumb.jppost-2752-0-11091300-1332112300_thumb.jp

    Now, the questions....It's small, barely 21/32", aren't most Bricks larger?

    Does the small size lessen value?

    Although it is in good shape, with only three very small, shallow chips and and as as-made small dimple near the top of the 9, the surface is very scratched, making it hard to see the pattern (without spit). Would this be a good candidate for polishing?

    Thanks as always,

    Stacy

  3. The cigar box yielded these handmades.

    1. a sweet little peewee, a hair under 1/2".Don't know if this would be called solid core or ribbon core.post-2752-0-42627400-1331685083_thumb.jp

    2. These two, both about 15/16", the green one has a large open (transparent ) area. What are these called?

    post-2752-0-21782800-1331685101_thumb.jppost-2752-0-79113900-1331685118_thumb.jppost-2752-0-10352700-1331685135_thumb.jp

    3.No clue on this one.

    7/8"

    It appears black with white and blue stripes, but when backlit, it is part transparent blue, part transparent magenta. I don't see pontils but there is something going on at one pole which I tried to photograph.

    post-2752-0-96425600-1331685150_thumb.jppost-2752-0-38639200-1331685164_thumb.jppost-2752-0-42864800-1331685181_thumb.jp

    As always, thanks for your help, patience and encouragement.

    Stacy

  4. Thanks everyone - in with the Pelts it goes!

    Or maybe I should start a "soda fountain" grouping and put this one with some "bananas", a "chocolate oxblood", a "root beer float" and a "7-up". That would be cool, right?

    Oh my, I must be spending too much time with these marbles, :wacko:

    Stacy

  5. Maybe I'm sticking my foot in it as a newbie, but my understanding of "vintage" is an item that is not old enough to be considered an antique ( sometimes 50 years for cars, 100 years for furniture, etc) but not contemporary. An older marble, like an Akro Popeye for example, would be considered "vintage" and there are certainly lots of them in very fine condition. JMHO

    Stacy

  6. I can really relate to what you're saying Edna!

    As a textile historian who studies schoolgirl needlework and samplers, I am very familiar with the way in which men can sometimes be "late to the party" in appreciation of art. A few decades ago, a very prestigious museum nearly threw away an enormous collection of 17th and 18th century samplers because they were thought to be unworthy of storage. Now that same institution has this collection ( worth in the hundreds of thousands of dollars) under lock and key.

    Men seem to be (by nature and socialization) slightly more keyed in to dollar or resale value whereas women seem to be a bit more free to say "it's beautiful, I love it, that makes it valuable".

    I mean no disrespect to the men on this board - just commenting on the sometimes different gender-based viewpoints in the art world.

    When I began my collection with a huge tin of 100's of marbles found in my in-laws basement, it was the two Vitro fancy tiger-eyes that captured my attention most of all and I am still smitten.

    Stacy

  7. Happy to report that I am home in snowbound New York state today after yesterday's trip from Phoenix (where folks were complaining about a few clouds and "chilly" 50 deree temps). I need a tshirt that reads "I survived cross-country travel in the storm of 2011". It actually was kind of an adventure that involved rental car, shuttle, plane, mini-bus, train, bus, taxi and snow-covered car, but there was marble mail on the table when I got in, so all is well. :)

×
×
  • Create New...