Jump to content

Steph

Supporting Member Moderator
  • Posts

    29125
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    31

Everything posted by Steph

  1. Okay, not Carnelian. ,#4 is what Akro would have called a "moss agate". (There are both cork and patch versions of "moss agate".) Collectors have a different name for it. Might be a "cherry-ade". But I can't remember if cherry-ades are also supposed to glow. I'll wait for someone else to help out with that one. I'll stick with Vitro on #5.
  2. Thank you, Scott! PM me with your address.
  3. I wondered why so quiet! Good luck! I'm looking forward to some marble jaunts also, if Mike hasn't bought up all the marbles in the state.
  4. All corks are good but Carnelians and Popeyes stand out.
  5. Well done. All except for #5 are corkscrews. Some have other names also. #1 is called a Popeye. #2 is a Spiral #3 is an Onyx #4 might be a Carnelian Agate -- does it have a tan base which glows green under blacklight? #6 looks like it might be a hybrid. of some kind with the trace of green along the orange. #5 might be a Vitro. Pictures of the seams would be good here.
  6. In the first photo, #1, 2 and 5 have seams showing. That's the feature we're looking for on these patch style marbles. #1. Vitro blackline all-red -- this is from the 1950's, earlier and more desirable than the most common all-red which doesn't have the "black line" #2. Peltier Rainbo -- an attractive one #3. Another Pelt Rainbo probably (but has similar colors to a well-known Alley swirl, so this is an example of why it's good to know if the marble has seams) #4. I think Transparent Swirl (which is in the WV Swirl category). I say "I think" because it's close to looking like a slag, but I do think swirl. #5. Marble King Tri-color Rainbow #6. I think this one is a slag -- machine-made slags are from the 1900's to about 1930.
  7. For just one marble or just a few, some people use bubble wrap lined envelopes. I currently worry too much to put them in an envelope but lots of people do it that way. Very small boxes can be used for just one marble. The main thing is for there to be enough room to fit postage and tracking information on the box. If you plan to do a lot of shipping you can get good small boxes in bulk for a small price per box at someplace like Uline.com. At least I used to. I haven't checked Uline prices in awhile. My last box and bubble wrap order came from Staples. The smallest flat rate shipping box from USPS can fairly easily hold 50 marbles with reasonable amounts of cushioning. (You can distribute them into three or four ziplock bags and wrap those snugly to prevent rattling, and still have room for bubble wrap cushion.) I'm kinda silly with my shipping -- I individually wrap most marbles in small ziplock bags (like 1.5" x 1.5" or 2" x 2"). Then I may not use as much bubble wrap because the individually wrapped marbles are not going to clink against each other. (If someone really doesn't care about cushion -- and surprisingly some do not -- you can fit even more into those small flatrate boxes.)
  8. It's settled. I'm moving to Amsterdam!
  9. Nothing stands out to me. I'd put 'em in a basic West Virginia swirl lot. Ebay lets you list 50 items per month without any fees up front (just the 10% fee at the end). You could play around with different sizes of lots to see what sells for you. Remember that when you ship marbles, they need to be packed snugly but not too tight (so they don't rattle or grind), with enough cushion to be protected from whatever outside forces might impact them on the journey. Bubble wrap works better than packing peanuts for marbles. I mention this now to get that idea percolating in your brain while you're contemplating lot size.
  10. The new Moon Dogs are pretty. Got 'em in the mail today. Forgot to check the mail until after dark. And even in the dim light the lutz popped out at me. But the battery ran out on my camera and I don't know where my charger is!
  11. Steph

    Flames?

    Note, the Christensen Bloody also has some brown in it. Not straight red.
  12. Steph

    Group 007

    Oh yes, #6 ... I think Peltier, but it's an unusual color distribution.
  13. Steph

    Group 007

    1. Marble King Tricolor Rainbow 2. WV Swirl 3. Hmmm ... Leaning Vitro, but if someone else said Marble King I would not be surprised 4. Vitro Helmet (not rare but not quite common -- the helmet pattern is well-liked by collectors -- from the 1930's) 5. West Virginia swirl -- I'm leaning toward Cairo Novelty as the maker
  14. Was enjoying this in another thread, so I'll put it here .
  15. Steph

    Group 006

    1. I think that's a Master Comet 2. Looks like a Vitro which got folded in an unusual way. Not sure, but I think it's a 1930's version. A Tri-Lite. 3. Think it's a West Virginia swirl -- neat with that inky look. Because of the inky look someone else might be able to pick out the maker. 4. Peltier Rainbo 5. Not sure from those views -- maybe Akro? 6. If that marble is opaque, then Marble King Wasp. It's a special color combo in the general category of Marble King Rainbows.
  16. Steph

    Flames?

    I was hoping that the white base would have a uranium glow. That's a famous trait of Christensen Bloodies. But they don't _have_ to glow. I remember once it was said that about 50% have a glowing base. Galen (lstmmrbls) is a CAC guy. I'm encouraged by his post.
  17. Hippo -- the other other white meat
  18. I love the bump. This last one you just posted? Is that the one you think Master on? Because I'd probably agree. Especially if it's normal size.
  19. Here is the "reticello" which Edna posted. By Will Menzies. If anyone else would like to post illustrations of glass terms, that would be cool. "glass with a small network" http://www.cmog.org/video/reticello
  20. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_glass_art_terms Learned the word "reticello" today. Thanks to Edna. Realize I need to expand my glass vocabulary. Seems like we might already have a thread with useful words like this in it, but not finding it right now.
  21. Steph

    Group 004

    In the first photo, #1 and #2 show cutlines. For me, those are the most important things to see in an ID of a patch type of marble. #2 is an interesting-looking marble. I think it's a Vitro. You could try it at $10 and see if it sold. #3 might be interesting but I'm not getting a good feel for it. As well as I can tell, the other four are very simple and $2 might be high for them. I just noticed #2 has a yellow stripe in the first picture and an orange stripe in the second. Is it the same marble in both photos? Does the single stripe change from yellow to orange? That's different. Might make it worth more. ??
  22. Steph

    Group 003

    #2 and #3 are the Akros. They're corkscrews. #1 is a Vitro Blackie. #4 is an Alley. #5 ... need to see the seams head on so that I can get a feel for how many ribbons there are and how they join up, but gonna say likely not Akro. #6 is a WV Swirl, not Akro.
  23. Lou! You hear that? We need to meet to discuss my raise.
×
×
  • Create New...