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Steph

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Posts posted by Steph

  1. There are some other interesting marbles here.

    The blue and white with yellow stripes on the bottom right is unusual. Looks sort of Pelt-y but a little different.

    Just above the red/white/blue that I mentioned earlier is a possible 7-Up. If it is a 7-Up it would be one of the relatively few Rainbos with a special name. (The 7-up has a transparent green base with red and white ribbons.)

    I like the brownish Rainbo up there too.

    The Pelt Rainbos are nice for collectors. Not necessarily worth much money (I once sold four sparkly green 7-Ups for $20 but most Rainbos wouldn't do that well). Nice to have though.

  2. Not sure about ideal backlighting. You mean for checking fire? Or for checking translucence?

    I keep saying I want a penlight for backlighting but haven't followed through. I check for fire by looking toward lamp or the overhead light. (But a penlight could help you be more sure about any hints of orange .... I really gotta get one.)

    One problem with the notion of hybrid is that sometimes you'll see a band of color which came from two colors blending, not from a separate stream of that color. When glass blends the resulting colors can be different from when paint blends. So yellow and green wouldn't necessarily make yellow-green ... could make brownish. (The definite hybrid for the popeye would be when there was a definite third color and not a blend.) I wanted those two to be hybrids but I'm on the fence right now.

    Popeyes are great marbles no matter what.

  3. No one has said anything about the big white translucent on the far right? I checked it because I had been reading about moonies. Well, it had an orange-ish glow, but I thought that was coming from the pinky-pearly-milky insides.

    I'm not sure what to say about the big one. Does that have an iridescent coating? If so, then it looks like maybe another modern marble slipped into the collection.

    Edit: From here it looks like the pearly is on the outside -- that's what I mean by iridescent coating.

  4. :)

    Some of those corks with the white base look definitely translucent. Some with the more solid-looking white base might possibly show themselves to be translucent if you hold them to a light.

    If you can see orange glow in the base of the white-ish ones, then those are Akro Aces. If you can't see fire and it's basically a solid white base, then those are called Akro Prize Names.

    (Some of the marbles we will call Prize Names were probably actually sold as Akro Aces but if you can't see the orange then safest not to hope or claim they'e Aces.)

    The Prize Name was introduced in 1930 (or possibly late 1929, but I think 1930). That was the beginning of Akro's cork line.

  5. And I'm curious to know what the Pelt specialists think about that bigger Multicolor up front. For me that would be a keeper for sure.

    Looks like also a somewhat oversized Multicolor in the middle section ... didn't knock my socks off at first like the big one did in front, but I like it.

  6. You've done such a great job of sorting, Sara, that I almost hate to ask this ...

    I will though ... are you sure that one is a corkscrew? Maybe it's just the chips which are making it seem odd but the ribbons don't quite seem corky. I was wondering if it might a Peltier instead.

  7. Toward the right there is one with transparent blue on one side and white with a red stripe on the other. That's a Vitro Helmet. From the 1930's. A popular marble.



    On the right edge, there might be two with oxblood. I stress might. They sort of fit the pattern of some Akro patches made with ox.

  8. Yes. Vitro Agate Tiger Eye on the bottom right. Circa 1950's.

    The amber one could be a slag.

    The blue ones are Peltier Rainbos.

    When we talk about Peltiers you may hear the name "Rainbos" in three different ways. (Three that I can think of right now.)

    There are the basic Rainbos. Which the blue ones are. They were introduced in the mid- to late-30's, and continued to be made for decades.

    There are the National Line Rainbos, which are earlier than the basic rainbos. Late 20's (I think) and early 30's.

    There are the Multicolor Rainbos (of which you have a lot), which are from the National Line period. So around the early 30's. (Just because you have a lot doesn't make them not special. It's cool to see so many together.)

    You also have some Peltier Rainbos up in the green section. (Plus one or more WV swirls.)

    p.s. Marble King made Rainbows, with the 'w' left on the name. Pelt left the 'w' off. :)

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