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1313

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  1. i first learned to make marbles in cambridge ohio, from richard anderson. richard was an old man when i met him, he had numerous jobs at different glass companies, cambridge glass co, degenhart, mosser glass,boyd glass. he had alot of stories about the christensen agate company. he even took me a tour of the old factory sites. i went home and practice, practice, practiced.i learned to make marbles from practice. after making the old machine made types, i wanted to venture into making cane marbles. i made an attempt, at my home to make cane marbles. a very few cane marbles were made and i realized that i wasnt equipted to make them at home.

    boyd miller asked me to come to tamarack studio in west virginia, as he was the lead glass producer at tamarack. i went, not knowing what to expect. i was soon off to a new race, glass marble cane making. over the years i produced many marble cane in west virginia from different types of glass.

    a series of medical complications stopped me from making any marbles until 2013. my mind was always on making glass marbles.

    in 2013 i visited canal fulton glassworks and talked with brian graham about renting studio time from him, he agreed at 200 dollars a day. i had found a place to rekindle my marble making. grueling travel, motel stays and crummy food, was still in the mix. 200 a day soon added up to 500 a day. times really have changed and so have the prices. as you can see from the pics, a youthful marble maker to an aging marblemaker

    post-3215-0-67360000-1376859680_thumb.jp

    post-3215-0-44080100-1376859840_thumb.jp

  2. There are some out there - maybe not in large quantities. You know that. Maybe experienced collectors who have seen all the Jabos can tell that they are Jabos but 90% of the collectors can't - even ones that collect the 'real' types of marbles. I have seen some that mimic the red, white & blue Alleys (or Champion) and other WV swirls (colors & patterns). Here are a few pics where the colors are close - would fool many a collector. These are Kevins from eBay.

    wouldnt these hold some value as flames????

  3. i think jeeperman is right on the money. although the jabo marbles and the sam and dave marbles are nice, they just dont have the age/history behind them.

    now galen, you know the extreme cost of going to a marble show, its hard to spend that kinda money on some pipedreamin look around for vintage marbles. i just went to the flea market, what i found on pipedreamin didnt add up to what i spent in gas. i did use the restroom and left a present, may have been worth the whole trip........

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