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Everything posted by Steph
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I agree with you Jabo call at least on most of those. You might find some stand out and want a new ID later, but I think you made a good sort.
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(Mine in that photo are probably mostly Akros. The top left is probably a Master.)
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One day I really must replace the tutorial on seams and cutlines which I accidentally deleted. For ID purposes, I find the most useful views of patches and rainbow/rainbo-style marbles to be the seams. I'm going to start pulling up different marble types from my basement and start working on that new tutorial today. In the meantime, here is an example of marbles posed to show off one of their seams. Such marbles usually have another seam on the opposite side, which can also be useful to show. Some marbles have a little scoop seam on one end and a V-shaped seam on the other end, for example, and that is a big clue. I might need to retake the picture of the top left one here, I might want to pose that so it will look more like a V-seam. I need to look at it more closely. Will do that as I try to bring up nice representatives of marbles with this style of cutlines.
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I think not enough detail in the marbles themselves to pin them down to a maker. The red one seems to be a swirl of some kind. . The blue could maybe be Master, but ???
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Yes, I'd go with WV swirls on the last four groups. I"m not seeing a Pelt Rainbo structure on most if any of the top two groups. I'm seeing solid patches. Is it one patch per marble? Or one patch on either end? If one patch per marble, then might possibly be Akro, or Master. If two patches of the same color, one on either end, then maybe Marble King.
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#3 and #4 are Akro or Master, circa 1930's. Possibly Akro on #3 and Master on #4. (People who worked at Akro broke off and founded Master.) #5 could be a handgathered slag from earlier in the 1900's, possibly one which spent time in water, giving it a matte finish. Is #2 in the 9/16" range, as opposed to the 5/8" range or larger? If so then maybe a "game marble". Hard to tell with solid color marbles. Need more views on #1. More views on all could be helpful, but especially #1.
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The top is a combination which _could_ be a 1940's Vitro Conqueror. But there is a similar Japanese marble from around the 1960's, I think, and I have a feeling yours if the Japanese one. It's sometimes called a Wales style marble, because of the Wales brand found on some of the packages containing that type. Need more views on the aqua one. The black (or purple) and white could be Marble King, but ?
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I think Japanese transitional on #9. West Virginia swirl on #1, 6, 12. Probably others. For instance, probably #11 though it's not as swirly. #2 might be a somewhat more modern marble from Asia. Or I suppose it could be a vintage Master.
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I agree with Stephen on #2. It's from the 1930's. #3 is Master. I'd estimate 1940's, but maybe a little earlier or later. The colors on #10 look Peltier, and at least one view looks Peltier, but one view looks like the ribbons went very wild, so I'm not sure. You have several West Virginia swirls in there. #7 is probably one of the WV swirls ... but I at least briefly wondered if it might be Christensen Agate. As white as it is, if it's not Christensen Agate, I might guess Ravenswood. (Ravenswood is in the West Virginia swirl family. There were many swirl makers in West Virginia. Christensen Agate is from Ohio.) #1 does not look like a swirl. It has a long seam like one might see on a Marble King or Vitro.
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I would say Vacor for 1, 2, 3, 5, 7. (I think I'm seeing iridescence on #3, and I suspect it will turn out to be a Vacor Wavebreaker.) Possibly Asian for #6. No guess on #4.
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This page can help you recognize Vacor styles. https://www.billes-en-tete.com/liste_billes.php
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Combining the pictures into a collage made them too small to see detail on. Maybe your collage started out larger? The forum software resizes large photos. Don't worry. You'll work out the kinks.
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The first guess that most would give on the first marble is Jabo. Which would mean made after 1990. The peewee is interesting. With the irregular shape of the darker blue spot, I don't have a guess for it.
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Okay, at that size, I"m thinking if older than it would be a slag, and if made after 1990, then it would be a Jabo.
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This could be an amber slag, from the 1920's or so. More views could help nail it down. But if it is older, then I'm pretty sure that's what it is.
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Look forward to seeing your collection.
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way cool
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Welcome back to the races. That hotwheels finish line gadget is cool. They've come a long way since my brother's hotwheels set in 1970.
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- marblerun
- marble race
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I went to Alan's page thinking maybe he had Alleys on the CAC page because his pages are still from the time before they were understood as Alleys. But the similarly colored swirls I see there ... they look a little different to me from yours. Aaaaahhhhh ... I didn't go far enough down the page .... this one ... it does look like an Alley.
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Always glad to help. I'm not seeing those as wirepulls. But I could be wrong. Been wrong many times. I"m seeing them in the general family of swirls. A little feathery in the ribbon in your more detailed shot. The Veiligglas marbles tend to have crisper ribbon.
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@Yupimagirl, do yours have an iridescent finish? That would be a sign that they were modern, probably from Asia or possibly Mexico. Possibly a decorative glass, though possible still planned as a toy marble. If not iridescent, then really dark "clearies" and hard to tell the age. Could be, say, 50's. Or could be this century.
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Hi, at first glance I saw "modern". But now I see some vintage in there. On the top row, 2nd from left, the blue and black (on a white base) is a Vitro Blackie, from 1960, give or take. Top left might be an Akro patch, possibly from the 1930's. The leftmost marble on the middle row could be a vintage swirl, maybe 30's to 50's. On the bottom row, the cat's eyes on either end could be vintage, or could be modern.. I can't see enough detail on the far right on the middle row. The rest look modern, styles currently in production, most or all from Asia. As I I suggested to another new poster, best to put a few marbles per thread. Since yours are laid out neatly and there's just one group, I took a shot at them. But my brain is very tired.
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Welcome. You have a Peltier Rainbo. That satin finish could come from time spent in an aquarium. (one possibility) A wirepull is sort of a normal marble actually in spite of it's intriguing name. It was made by a thin stream of molten glass with a thin ribbon of color in it. The stream piled up onto itself in a zig zaggy manner which some thought looked like it could have been caused by the movement of a wire. It wasn't. There are lots of swirls made in a similar way. The ones which get the wirepull name are from Europe. Specifically they have been identified as having been made by the Veiligglas company in Amsterdam. Here is a thread @winnie started on the. (She's from Amsterdam.) https://marbleconnection.com/topic/20865-veiligglas-wirepulls