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Steph

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Posts posted by Steph

  1. The past ceramic artists I had in mind who made names for themselves in the marble world were Nadine MacDonald and Tom Thornburgh.  A different style from yours.  

    I've sent a feeler to my contemporary guru to see if she's aware of anyone else who might be relevant to you. 


    Edit:  the only additional names were for polymer clay guys such as Carl Fisher which I gather is not what you had in mind.

  2. About ten years ago I gave some marbles away to a cub scout mother for a marbles badge the boys could earn.  But I don't think that badge is available anymore.

    The most active  marble recruiter I know of  is Rich Maxwell who helps students build marble runs at schools.  I see him posting about various marble activities on facebook. Here is his website. 

    https://marblekeeper.com/?fbclid=IwAR3Redc8-d4DTNG8Q5utBjGekEL_NeSy5Fyuo1_0zqa7EHiMzgIB1J998bk

  3. I think vintage.  A distinctive marble type that I've seen several times before.  I might even have one.   But I don't know if I ever saw a definitive ID on this style. 

     If I do have one, I probably got it in a lot which was half Alley and half another company (I don't recall which) and the marbles were in a display case and fell out of the case in transit and got all mixed up and  I was too new to collecting  to  promptly deal with the situation and sort the marbles out.  If I had done that, I might know right now what that mysteriously attractive marble is.

  4. 11 minutes ago, Marbleized said:

    I'm so sorry to hear of Leroy's passing.  My apologies.  I was just wondering about why some marbles are out of round and wondered if the reconditioning process might be a cause.  Also, my message was written with machine mades in mind.  I have a few peltiers that are out of round.  Thanks!


    I'm going to send this question over to the main chat area.  I could hypothesize about Peltiers -- thinking about the cost-saving measures which they started adopting in the last half of the 30's -- but ???

  5. 8 hours ago, Marbleized said:

    Hi Everyone,  I just wanted to comment that the people on the list must be masters at the art of reconditioning marbles.  Leroy's pics of the marbles he's worked on look like new.  I was wondering if the reason some machine marbles are out-of-round is because someone was not quite an expert at this.  Or is it the nature of reconditioning where it nearly impossible to keep that perfectly round shape?  Or is it that the off-shaped marbles were rejects from the factory and found in dugs?  


    Most out-of-round marbles would have come from the factory that way and weren't reconditioned.  Probably different reasons for out-of-round.  Before I start ad-libbing, I probably should ask if you have any particular marbles in mind.   Antique German marbles would have different reasons for being out of round than modern Jabos would.  I have been under the impression that machine-made marbles were more likely to be round during the age when kids were playing a lot of marbles, so I suppose that's where I'm most curious if you're thinking of examples there. 


    P.s., we lost Leroy in 2018 :(  

  6. The older clays were sometimes called "commies" because they were so common.  

    I think the ones you made are beautiful. Might take a bit to develop a following but it could happen.      I can think of a couple of makers of ceramic marbles who established their works as collectible. 

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