Jump to content

Steph

Supporting Member Moderator
  • Posts

    29268
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    37

Everything posted by Steph

  1. I wrote the guy, mainly to warn a seemingly new seller about the problems people with 0 feedback have been causing marble dealers. He asked me who Scott Patrick was. I guess that's been suggested to him as a possible maker of the mibs. He seemed glad for the info I gave him in response.
  2. Steph

    Kokomo Examples

    Short amount of time, on a single machine purchased from Peltier. 1939 - 1942 according to one account (possibly from a company publication), after which they sold the machine back to Peltier. There is doubt about that date. It could possibly have been as late as 1945. However, it was only a sideline, to recycle Kokomo scrap glass. The sand for the Kokomo glass even came from the same place as the sand for Pelts. Though 3 to 6 years might sound significant, we are comparing one machine for that amount of time, to Peltier's multiple machines and decades of marble production. Kokomo has some distinctive mibs. Those you get to feel certain about. So I'm told. A 'signature' koko color combo:
  3. Steph

    Kokomo Examples

    Some more favorites. This is a small group but I've liked 'knowing' they were kokos. There was some dispute but the provenance seemed good to me (just not widely known) and they fit nicely with n2life's. (click to enlarge) And here is a bag owned by a prominent Indiana collector. :-) The pix were posted by Craig in a 2005 thread. Some of these are single patches, not the typical rainbo style. (click to enlarge) The potential range of Kokos is such a mystery to most of us. It's awesome to get a chance to see any unusual examples 'up close'. There's the continual caveat not to overidentify Kokos. I've heard from those who have reason for caution, that if there's a choice between Pelt and Koko, or Vitro and Koko, or Master and Koko, or foreign and Koko, etc., the odds of Koko are so low that the other option should be chosen. ... since so few Kokos were made, and since their distribution seems to have been concentrated more or less in the neighborhood of Kokomo, Indiana. But not having examples makes it more tempting for people to guess. I remember how I stared and stared at some tempting marbles in this bag because of the mibs I suspected might be single patches -- and I had some mibs which looked like that. I couldn't tell enough to rule the bag mibs out. So I couldn't stop wondering about them. Having really good examples might feed the "everything looks like a koko" fever, but it might have the opposite result. The other items I could add are a coupla things from Kokomo papers. Just for fun. No mibs are shown. One is about kokos being given out as freebies by someone local.
  4. Pardon the giggle at Marble Mental. I do love rediscovering a cache of marbles and realizing how many "new" marbles I have. How many mysteries are solved. How many mysteries aren't yet, but now have brothers in the fight. When the sorting session winds down and I sort of wake up to find five hours have elapsed and the sun has gone down, that can be disconcerting but I love it.
  5. Steph

    Kokomo Examples

    Here is an awesome Kokomo pic which is looking for a host, sort of. So this is a thread intended for the archives. I am starting it here, to invite anyone who would like to contribute. Thanks! Here is the story from n2life71 at LOM: and a follow-up: Here are the contents of the bag in lovely detail. (click to enlarge) (photo courtesy n2life71) source, and original discussion: Anyone able or a how to repair Old Mesh bags?
  6. Modern mibs fluoresce too. My very brightest might be my very oldest. But I have some modern marble kings which are simply brilliant. They say about 50% of Christensen bloodies will fluoresce. But that means 50% won't. And different chemicals could lead to different colors of fluorescence. I even have some glass which fluoresces a fairly strong blue. Some of the blues are modern MK's. One I sold was a vintage jar. p.s. thanks Alan for the link
  7. yah from the movie. Have a new answer now for the question of what to do with all those clearies left over from sorting, huh? Sounds like the panel was designed specially so the marbles could "fly out quickly for shooting!" Did that make it into the movie? This is the magazine it came from, Set Decor, Summer 2005 (7 megabyte download). Article starts on p. 64. Hosted by the Set Decorators Society of America
  8. The dragon headboard. 18,000 marbles!
  9. Who's in the middle pic? Behind the tributes and with white hair, I mighta thought Edna ... but I thought her hair was longer!
  10. Wouldn't this be awesome! Like for a mib display, or for cats, though not both! ... (and I have 3 cats ) http://www.google.com/patents?id=JdNKAAAAEBAJ
  11. On the four colors, in the old ones the green vanes are opposite the blue vanes. In the two color ones, marbles with clean separation of the colors tend to be valued higher by collectors but sellers sometimes try to bill being 'hybrid' as a virtue. Here's probably the best St. Mary's thread I've seen. Hands down the best when Don's mibs were still there. I hope they can be rescued. http://marblemental.yuku.com/topic/505
  12. I don't know how that fits. Just thought it was funny. :icon_lmao:
  13. Thanks for clearing that up! (And cool about the shaping blocks!)
  14. can we have a close-up of that pontil? :icon_lmao:
  15. I have a red one and a purple one. Bought them on ebay. And yeah, they do look sorta like fiber optics, don't they. I wondered if that's what mine were. My first thought was goldstone, but then I went back and forth. The seller didn't know what they were, just that they were cool, with which I totally agree.
  16. That was the title on some versions of the 1911 article here. :-) Different versions were used as filler for years. The original might have appeared in the Boston Herald. Editors apparently picked and chose which parts of the original to include, trimming it as needed to fit in the space available. The version I chose for this post includes info on where the packaging was made. There's one as late as 1918 with three of the same paragraphs, including the same production totals, but with a 4th paragraph about sizes made -- from 9/16" to 6" (size of a cannon ball). A different story appeared in 1930, without numbers, and it names the J. E. Albright Co. That one compared how Americans made clays to how it was done in Germany. (click if you want a larger print version, but it's big -- 840 kb) Here's what the Washington Post included at the end instead of mentioning where the bags were made: (click to enlarge) Here's the 1930 story as it appeared in a column called "Answers to Questions", by Frederic J. Haskin: (click to enlarge)
  17. These are for play, but not traditional play. Do we have them yet? (Hi everyone -- this is still one of my favorite threads. :-) (source) In case that doesn't count , one industrial use for mibs was "oil-drum cleansing".
  18. A thread which shows the evolution of what appear to me to be some fairly convincing looking fake benningtons: http://marbleconnection.com/i...showtopic=10722
×
×
  • Create New...