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Steph

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Posts posted by Steph

  1. I'm pretty sure not a double ingot.

     

    Are you thinking a brown marble fused to a red marble?   Double ingots would have two of the same type of marble fused together.  Two molten marbles plop onto the rollers one after the other and get stuck together going down the rollers.  

  2. Love the bottles.  The urine bottle is hilarious but very cool.

     

    My Codd bottle is modern.   I got it for a small price just to have one, then did some research and learned it's not vintage but that's okay.  I can't remember if it's modern because it's from another country that continued the Codd bottle tradition longer than most.  Or if it was made more as a curiosity.   I just wanted one and now I have it.


    psymrIj.jpg

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  3. 33 minutes ago, Marbleized said:

    It was in a jar of alleys and jabos.

    Alleys and Jabos .... hmmmm ... no help there!   

     

     

    30 minutes ago, Marbleized said:

    The glass doesn't look like Vacor. I'm pretty sure it is something else. The colors might seem bright because I was playing with the lighting since there wasn't much natural sunlight.

    That can do it.  

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  4. :thup: 

    Lovely.

     

    They look like the Vacor Rustic.  So I won't quickly jump to assuming such marbles are Swedish when I see them in ordinary people's collections.  I'm just happy knowing more about them.  With the ingredients you described above, it sounds like they would be heavy marbles like the Rustics are.   Maybe Vacor learned the chocolate method somehow ... or maybe the Rustic marbles were imported by Vacor.  

  5. If the clear is glass, then it appears to be a fried marble.  Glass cracked by extreme cold and heat applied alternately.    But that's very large for the typical fried marble.  That's why I'm wondering if might actually be plastic, not glass at all.



    The blue marble is two inches??!!  It could be a slag or transitional.  At that size, I'm thinking of only two choice. MFC made large slags, but I don't know of they made one in that light of a shade of blue, and I don't know if they ever would have had a pontil like that.  So I am not leaning toward MFC.

    I'm actually leaning toward contemporary because I just don't recognize such a large handgathered marble as being vintage if it doesn't fall into the MFC zone. 
     

     

  6. Does anyone know what they are?

    I remember seeing the name on some Vitro item from the 1930's.  Maybe it was an ad.  Maybe it was a sample box.  But I don't remember seeing accompanying marbles.  Pretty sure the Du-Lites were mentioned alongside Tri-Lites.

     Possibly the item was photographed in the Vitro book.  But my guest is using my office and I wasn't able to lay my hands on the book quickly when he nicely stepped out for me to have a look around.  So I'll have to do a deeper search later.    Does anyone here have their book handy?  


    About 15 years ago Tri-LIte wasn't a name in common usage. Now  "everybody knows" what they are.   Du-Lite remains a secret from me.   

     

  7. A family friend has arrived for a two week visit.  He brought his two cats.  They have been housed in my office -- to help keep them from getting the poop scared out of them by our three cats.  My computer access is therefore severely limited for the duration.

  8. 2 hours ago, Chris Parson said:

    ....  one of the vanes is orange on one side and yellow on the other, with a fading blend of the two colours on top of the vane. I don't know if that was meant to be or if it's normal? ....
     



    I wouldn't expect it to have been intentional, but it is not surprising.  I have come to expect more variation with the Vacor version than with the similar Asian style.  

  9. 99.99% sure that's Vacor.  :thup:  

    The general pattern for the Vacors is for them to have three pairs of colors, in the way made famous by Asian marbles.  But I'm not surprised by three vanes of one color, two of another and one of the third.  


    A key Vacor feature is how thick and wavy the vanes are.  

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