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Steph

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Posts posted by Steph

  1. I think it would be cool if we could talk about some of the marbles which bring high dollars in auctions because they're confused for older marbles. With examples and as much as we are able to know about when they were made. And with as little negativity as possible. We can complain about them being made, or we can try to learn about them. The choice might not be as cut and dried as that, but if there is too much negativity, then it seems that fewer people will participate in sharing information.

    These auctions are the ones which bring this to mind for me now.

    Marble blue with Cross 1,38 - 1,4 inch from Lauscha Ger

    EAGLE MARBLE GREEN SIZE 1,39 INCH

    Some pix from the auctions: (click to enlarge)

    th_290400192208_adlon398_b.jpg th_290400192208_adlon398_a.jpg

    th_BobKbKQCGkKGrHqUH-DUEu5Hec4BLnVyK4s.jpg th_180481347117_red4zora_e.jpg

    Those are new. However, they are not made by the same person whom Hansel commissioned to make the coin sulphies in 2004. Norbert Geitner made those. If I'm not mistaken, this is one of Mr. Geitner's:

    BWC2eZgWkKGrHgoH-DUEjlLlypo6BKVjDmj.jpg

    I'm going to see if I can get pix of the coin sulphides made in 2004, and maybe of some of the other coin sulphides which were made before 2004. Someone named Didi was making those.

    Would love to hear from others. I've asked Lee (Marble Wife) to add whatever she can. She has access to a lot of different reproductions.

    Okay, let's have some fun now! LOL

    • Like 1
  2. We do have sections for various topics... Including one on repair work... But, had you posted there, not many would have seen this. Steph would probably have moved it here to get more attention.

    hehe, I did move it Sue. lol. It was in the restoration forum so I moved it but I left a link so I could move it back when it ran its course. :)

    I really hope this topic gets a lot of discussion... I'm assuming the repair process you use is what is referred to as "cooking?" We've had discussions on this topic before... But, we've never had someone who actually DOES it, to chime in... I'm excited to ask questions and see what others have to ask...

    Me too. I've heard people asking, and kept waiting with great interest for an answer. But never got a clear idea.

  3. David, check out p. 92 of American Machine-Made Marbles. That's about Libbey Owens Ford of Vienna, WV making rough marbles, not for play but for later use in making fiber glass. Being spherical, they move easily through the different things they have to go through - rolling along conveyor belts and such.

    I've seen short references here and there about marbles being made for fiber glass - being made on different continents. We marble collectors just don't hear about it because it's boring industrial stuff.

  4. Some dug Champs of mine, gift from Ron. The scan distorts some things, but I needed it for another thread, and so here it is for this one too. [Edit: Only the three closest to the left may be Champion. The others were found at or near the Champ site, but the Alley site is near the Champ site. Turns out they're likely Alley. So the remaining Champs are the two on the left in the middle row and the one on the left on the bottom row.]



    gallery_279_160_25916.jpg

  5. Okay, I'm honestly surprised. It now appears that Yellow Jackets were introduced after All-Reds. 1964 for Yellow Jackets.

    I hope I put "if I understand correctly" in all the posts where I may have said that Yellow Jackets were made in the 1950's.

  6. :P

    The bottom left one here is brown and black and has some orange peel texture. It's the one I most suspect to be salt-glazed.

    I figure the black one on the right is probably a Bennie but it's unusual so I haven't been sure. The other side is mostly white. There is some splatter of other colors but the black dominates.

    The brown one in the top middle is glassy smooth. Much smoother than it looks in the scan. I guess it might be a bennie but it looks different from my obvious bennies. Much smoother and a different shade. Has a few rough spots but nothing I'd call eye.

    The dark green one on the left is a stray oddball. I can't tell whether it's glass, ceramic, stone or bubble gum. Smoother than it looks in the pic but it has a rough spot which you can see. Also has a few red specks which look a little like oxblood.

    The AMT at the top right is there just to reward you for your patience with the others. ;)

    gallery_279_160_22973.jpg

  7. Well, I'm not familiar with all that not being an eBay regular but the marble on its own is a tasty Dave McCullough 1980s creation done as part of a larger pkg. of marbles partially commissioned by Cathy Runyan-Svacina as she rightly so felt it was about time that there were some neat marbles out there for kids.

    Tell us more. I don't know the story behind the new old fashioned run(s)?

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