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Everything posted by Steph
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Does this fit in this thread? It looks different to me. But it has a ground pontil. I think. My marble but Charles' pix.
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Why Is This Guy Stiil Around?
Steph replied to I LOVE MARBLES's topic in General Marble & Glass Chat
I got dibs on your Hercules! just kidding. You'll be missed. Hoping your marble blues pass. But I understand. -
Why Is This Guy Stiil Around?
Steph replied to I LOVE MARBLES's topic in General Marble & Glass Chat
Someone once accused him of being Pavcraz. That had to hurt. Really sorry about that Bill. Sorry I ever mentioned it to you. Sorry anyone ever mentioned it to me. -
Thanks Bo. That's one of the kinds I'm wondering about. I wouldn't have thought so but they seem to be in the range some people are saying is okay for aquamarine. Hopefully someone with the inside dope will weigh in.
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While I'm at it, how about some Buttermilks? Here's Bob's pic from Chuck's article at Joe's website to get things started. And oh yes, Chuck's description: Thanks.
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Okay , , , here's Chuck's description. I guess my question is how does that translate visually. Are the examples I've been seeing of late people pushing the boundaries because they want to think they have aquamarines when they don't? Or have I been too strict in my interpretation? Trying to sort that out. Thanks. For an example, I've seen some called aquamarines where the base seemed rather close to being white. What's the range of base color which is 'allowed', or considered desireable. What's desireable in the patches? Stuff like that. Thanks again. -s
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for sure!
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Thanks for the help with Superiors. Next on the checklist is Aquamarines. What is their range of variation? I think of their "textbook" description as this which Smitty posted about them at Marble Mental. Smitty's wife is the one who named the Aquamarines. Here's Bob B's famous Aquamarine photo, as seen in Chuck B's Tri-Lites article, OLDER VITRO MARBLES (TRI-LITES). This photo has been presented as quintessential Aquamarines. Lately though I've seen some mibs being called Aquamarines which seem quite a bit different. So I was wondering how far other collectors feel comfortable taking the name.
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Here's a box from one of Marblealan's auctions. Popeye marbles are named after the box. They're not the only marble style which was sold in the Popeye boxes. They're in the boxes a lot though and won the name. Their real name to Akro back in the 30's was Tri-Onyx Agates. (click pix to enlarge) p.s., here's a close-up of two marbles from that box. One is a true popeye patch - a marble which was meant to be a cork but didn't get spun. (click to enlarge)
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I'll trade you a Wisconsin beach.
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http://marbles.yuku.com/
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That's why I asked! Superiors SEEM like they should be easier, but they've been sort of slippery!
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I need to learn more about Vitro Superiors. They don't seem like they should be too hard but I'm kinda cautious with Vitro names for some reason. Here's the "textbook" photo, where the "textbook" is Chuck B.'s article in the WVMCC newsletter about older Vitros. The article is now hosted at Joemarbles.com: OLDER VITRO MARBLES (TRI-LITES) Would love to see more pix of Superiors to get a better feel for how much they can vary. Thanks! (Would also like to see the range of variation of the other styles mentioned in that article, but will wait for another thread for that.)
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Check this out at Google Books. 1920's and 1930's Akro promos in Boys' Life magazine. I'd seen a few of them before but nowhere near this many. I have a lot of reading to do! Lots of notes to take! Tri-colors were touted as a new line in January 1931, for instance. (Earlier than I once thought.) I'm in heaven. Hope everyone else has as good a day/weekend as I'm going to. About 30 issues A coupla notes: Mr. Akro Talks About Marbles - booklet advertised in Feb. '29. Not sure I've seen that booklet, at least not with that cover. The Prize Name contest winners WERE announced. Supposed to have been published in June 1930 - that's what contest announcements had said. I have the June 1930 Boys' Life. Not there. The August issue explains why and gives the winners. The winning name was Fire Opal.
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Swirl, Corkscrew Cateye Marble
Steph replied to richsantaclaus's topic in General Marble & Glass Chat
Corky is nice. -
Red Sparklers: The New Adventures of Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford, by George Randolph Chester, in Cosmopolitan, 1914 Appears they cost a nickel apiece at the store.
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Woohoo, best spotted dick photo I've ever seen. Hands down!
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Jobber Box? Christensen? Help Me Out Here
Steph replied to Diane's topic in General Marble & Glass Chat
Maybe in this thread , , , maybe not. . . *she smiles archly* I bet there are a lot of people who would like to get a chance to bid on this but who might be afraid to tip their hand and show their interest too soon. -
And Sue's goodie posted in another thread today ...
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I'm sure going to have a hard time calling a small marble a parrot. I think I'll be late in adopting that, if I ever do. If the goal was 1" then how could a 5/8" marble be a contender? It takes a different machine to make a 5/8" marble, right? I've been hesitant over the parakeet name for a long time because I'd heard it used for different things - like the tiger eyes - and I was waiting for that name to kinda settle down in my mind. Now, thanks to this thread, I think I do understand it. And right now I like it better than parrot for the smaller marbles. I mean, if the goal was for the parrots to be big . . . then that should get the name . . . seems like. . I only have the one parrot, but half the excitement of getting that one was measuring it and seeing that it passed muster in the size department. lol So, that's my "for what it's worth" from a parrot novice. But it's where I'm at right now. I think I need a dancing banana!
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*giggle*
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Jobber Box? Christensen? Help Me Out Here
Steph replied to Diane's topic in General Marble & Glass Chat
I'm with the others. Kinda in shock, and waiting to see what the big CAC guns think. Here's a small box I asked about awhile back, also with Chrissies in it. It's the same stained glass pattern. Not my box! It was in a Morphy auction. Here's the thread where I asked. It has some discussion about the use of stained glass boxes in the late 20's, early 30's. Colorful Jobber Boxes -
I won't be hanging out my shingle as an appraiser any time soon. ;-)
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Not every marble has a name. But people want names. That's another cause of imaginative names. There's an appetite for them. I'll go ahead and add my best guess for what your marble is. My best guess is that it is a marble which Vitro would have called a Tri-Lite in the 1930's. And then some collectors in the 2000's would have called it an Elite, "Elite" being a name for particularly colorful Tri-Lites. That's my guess. If I'm wrong, I'll live. Pen, my understanding is that Parrots are a white-based marble and the goal of the creators was to cover the white as much as possible. Sometimes white shows through, sometimes not. The colors used to cover the white are sometimes transparent. My parrot knowledge is mostly theoretical though. I only own one of them. I'll step aside now and let people who have more speak up. One more thing before I fade, it would be good to remember that not every white-based 4-color Vitro shooter is a parrot, even in the 1" range. *entering watch mode* -s