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Steph

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Everything posted by Steph

  1. Best I can tell fro mthe pic, I'd have #1 in with the Akro Moss Agates. #4 might be an example of a Master style moss agate. I think Master called them Meteors but in their advertisements they described them as moss agates.
  2. #5 could be a Master. Brushed patch. What you're seeing as a pontil on #8 is likely damage. I'm not seeing the seams like I would like but from these views, Peltier Rainbo is a good possibility. This particular Rainbo would have a collector's name. It would be called a Sunset. #9 is a Vitro Conqueror. #1, #7, #10, and #11 I'd like to see more views of. To me #2, #3, #4, #6, and #12 all look like Moss Agates. Some of the others might also be Moss Agates. Akro is most famous for making Moss Agates. Master also made some of that general style. Probably lump your Moss Agate patches together for awhile, and think of them as Akros and not worry if some might be Masters. And as soon as I say that, I wonder about #4. It looks a little different. Let's add #4 to the list for more views.
  3. Yeah ... that could possibly have been from an Ace run. maybeeee
  4. First, there are no pontils there. These are all machine-made marbles. "Pontil" refers to a feature on handmade or sometimes hand-gathered marbles. Second, good job sorting by type. There are many which we can lump together here, and a few stragglers. That said, let me go study the pics.
  5. Need a like button for that Neon at least.
  6. The green and white is a West Virginia swirl. Because of the size it's easier to ID. It would be an Alley Agate, probably from the 1940's. The one with a brownish base and orange ribbons is a Peltier Rainbo. I think modern on the others. Probably made by JABO in Reno, Ohio after 1991.
  7. Here are some more Pelt Rainbos to help you get started, posted by Edna.
  8. No problem! Not color. If you can see similarities in structure, that's the best way to go. Like if you see marbles with ribbons laid out in the same pattern. About four marbles per thread is good. Peltier Rainbos are one of the types which people sometimes can learn quickly. Here's a box of Peltier Rainbos which might help you get a feel for what the basic Rainbo patterns are. You already have one Pelt Rainbo identified. See if you can find some more of those in your group.
  9. These two batches are Asian and modern. We often call them Imperials, because they have been found in Imperial Toy Company packaging.
  10. I wanna say West Virginia swirl. There were a lot of companies in West Virginia making swirls, starting around 1930. Can be hard to pin down which one would have made any particular swirl. Someone else might have a guess though.
  11. The bottom right are Marble King Rainbows -- from the late 1950's or early 1960's. I think that color combination is called a Wasp. Might be called something else too. The bottom left is a Vitro. Might be a black-line All Red but that brown band is so wide I wanna say something else. I'm blanking. Mark or someone else will know. I think it's from the 1950's, but could maybe be 1960's depending on what it turns out to be. In that view top right looks like it could be a more modern, Asian marble. I don't have a guess for the top left. More views could help.
  12. Peltier Rainbo. A style introduced in the mid- to late-1930's, and made for many years after that.
  13. From these views, I'll guess Vitro Agate. Maybe a 1930's version known as Tri-Lite.
  14. Hi Kim. Hope we can help. It can take awhile for things to click. But there are a few famous types which are easier than others to recognize. If you get those down then you can work on the others by process of elimination.
  15. Fantastic! I'm so glad you made it a reality!
  16. That would be nice. They're there now.
  17. Steph

    Nova's?

    http://marbleconnection.com/topic/6786-mostly-pix-peltier/?p=172063
  18. Steph

    Nova's?

    Yeah, I think we can rule out the white and black. http://marbleconnection.com/topic/11385-so-whats-the-scoop-on-peltier-rootbeer-floats/?hl=novas#entry96178
  19. I can imagine a tiny hint of a glow in the ones in the ad. Some luster. Some grain. Maybe. But I think a lot of Aces were opaque, in spite of intentions. I hope I don't sound too much like a broken record when I say that's related to why I think/believe/suspect the Aces didn't last very long. I don't actually have confirmation that they didn't last long, but there don't seem to be all that many of them, even considering how many are likely stuck in with folks' Prize Names. I suspect they were trying to copy Peltier's Realers. But whatever their inspiration was, I don't think they were very successful in the quality control on these. There are some completely opaque ones which I think were likely from Ace runs. I think they had a hard time getting the opalescence right and gave it up earlier rather than later. But I can't prove any of that.
  20. Yup, that sure looks like an Ace, and sure looks yellow. Nice to see.
  21. Thanks, Winnie. Thanks, Bo. A Buttermilk is one kind of Tri-Lite. A Superior is a different kind of Tri-Lite. (link) Keep 'em coming!
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