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Steph

Supporting Member Moderator
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Everything posted by Steph

  1. They really deserve their own thread. Why don't you repost them in the General Marble and Glass Chat section. Get more people to see them ....
  2. Group 3: #1. Interesting. Has a Master structure. Could be modern "Imperial" though. From Asia. #2. I think Vitro #3. Marble King #4. Looks like #1 in Group 2. Modern, foreign.
  3. Group 2: #1. ?? Modern foreign, I think #2. Marble King Cat's Eye #3. messed up game marble #4. ?? Champion? Hard to say.
  4. Group 1: #1. Not sure. Bigger than an average "game marble". Possibly a Jabo ... made after 1990. #2. Foreign. Modern. Made in China or Mexico. #3. Modern Marble King, made after 1970 ... possibly much more recently. #4. Possibly older Marble King. Maybe 1960's?
  5. Group 11 is interesting. Very. I might have thought Peltier if I just saw one of two of them. Seeing so many at once makes me wonder if there was a modern lookalike made for that Peltier style.
  6. Hi! Welcome. Yikes. That's a lot in one post. Best to have a separate thread for each group. Separate threads make it easier for people to take a shot at 'em with a minimum of confusion and a maximum of energy. Group 10 looks like modern Marble Kings ... made in the 2000's possibly.
  7. So is this one of the marbles that some people have suggested could have been made in Canada?
  8. This is a knowledgeable seller with much experience and a good reputation who is a member of this forum. I trust he had an honest reason for calling it CAC, even if it turns out that he is mistaken.
  9. What? Huh? Yellow base on that banana? ... check to see if it lights up under blacklight ..... Yellow is cool. Lighting up be WOW. Did you check all the greens in sunlight for aventurine?
  10. I had some Vitros (I think) which had three vanes of one color on one side and three vanes of a different color on the other side. And if I recall correctly many of those vanes had serious sparkle. Like sparkle even in red vanes and white vanes. I wish I still had those ... but at the time I was buying marbles to turn around and sell ... and those sold well. Don't know if that sparkle counted as aventurine but that's how I billed it 'coz I still don't know any other way I could have billed it.
  11. Good stuff in those snippets, Sara. Yeah, bottle green tint is common and not generally desirable. Blue is often deemed special. Red is even more special than blue. I had some with a peach-tinted base. Sold them on ebay for more than the average amount ... think maybe I got around $4 per marble in a small group ... but don't recall for sure. Historical note: it was a fire not a flood which destroyed the St. Marys plant.
  12. Here's an article mentioning Payne. Here's a pic which is labeled Payne ... posted by BJ I believe.
  13. Joe McDonough found them. ... and gave me one. I guess I could/should take a pic for the yellow thread.
  14. Steph

    Friday

    The weeks rush by so fast for me. January almost gone!
  15. One link now just to remind myself I want to do this. Coral: Corals .... And Questions ... And Stuff
  16. I posted that vote without seeing Darla's answer. Naturally seeing her post makes me doubt my answer especially since it was some of Darla's photos which helped me sort out my coral collection. I'm still sorta leaning Alley for the moment.
  17. I started this thread in part to show straight edges on Pelts: http://marbleconnection.com/topic/9902-fun-with-peerless-patches
  18. One reason I'm a little hesitant to commit on tinted bananas is that I have a small sized honey amber banana which has been attributed to Peltier. (The root beer float one is a bigger marble.) But there's always an exception to the rule, isn't there. Basically what Ann said is what you should go by. Someone might want the blue-based ones even if they're foreign. It could take a different kind of marketing than selling Pelts would.
  19. p.s., the blue-tinted marbles in the bottom center of Picture 3 may be of interest to someone too. I just can't place them at the moment. Maybe a more detailed picture of vanes would help. The sharper the banana-like vanes are the more likely they are to be foreign.
  20. In Picture 3 you have foreign cat's eyes and American-made Peltier bananas. Some of the banana-like ones could possible be foreign. But the plump ones in the crystal clear bases -- go with Pelt bananas. Pelt bananas are popular, and could be worth a little bit of money. Don't know if any would go for more than a dollar, but I think we get above the "few cents" range. I'd guess the ones with adventurine to be worth more than the ones without. The three-vane and six-vane foreign ones are generally worth pretty much nothing. Since even the newest marbles sell for a few cents apiece in stores you might find someone who would give you something for them but mostly they're not considered collectible. There are exceptions. I don't see the exceptions in your group though. [Edit: again, the boulders might be worth more to someone.] With your six-vane ones, notice that the six vanes are three pairs of vanes. Like red-red followed by white-white followed by blue-blue. When the vanes take different configurations that's when we get to collectibility. Here are two examples of other variations. These are called cross-throughs. Dark blue pair and light blue pair with a white cross-through: Three-way cross-through: There is also an American variety with cross-through vanes which is considered collectible. You can see some of those here:
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