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cheese

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Everything posted by cheese

  1. Edited, thought I was seeing white but it was an illusion I think
  2. Doesn't look polished to me but to be sure you would need very well focused photos with high detail available so we can zoom in and use our screen in lieu of a loupe. You can see enough in these photos to know that it wasn't sphered or ground and polished, at least not the entire surface.
  3. Yes, that's one too. Nice! A lineup of Taterbugs.. a little blurry on the photo:
  4. Yes on the Mountain Dew! The pile with the melted ingot in the middle, those are called Opal Ladies. They are in the same blush line as the Lady Taters, but the tater is a different base. Here is a Lady Tater
  5. A few more to look over. I loaded from the computer but it downgraded image quality, so I'm back to using the IMG links for full zoomable crisp-ness of focus.
  6. I think it may be CAC. Not all CACs were so crisp and well defined as what we're used to. Sometimes the quality was less than we normally expect.
  7. I'd say those in the hand shot are Peltiers.
  8. I think it is, but was wondering what you saw or knew that said not Alley. Thick sloppy ribbons are common on St. Mary's and some Sistersvilles. That hook/bird head shape in the 3rd pic is common on alleys. So is the double ribbon or thinned clear strip in the middle of the ribbon. The wobbly run or flow of the ribbon too. That's where I'd put it but other makers can do those things too.
  9. The latter group looks like JABOs.
  10. JABOs. 1990s I'd say
  11. Why are you sure it's not Alley?
  12. Pattern, glass, size, bubbles.
  13. Yep Alley. RWs don't usually get this size.
  14. I was a teenager visiting my grandparent's house where my Mother grew up in New England and she found her old childhood marbles in the attic. She gave them to me, this was around the mid 1980s. I admired the different styles and colors, and back home we frequented an antique store and I had to go since I was still a teenager. The store owner let my family browse while I checked out his display case full of marbles behind his desk. He was a big husky guy named Sarge, hair everywhere out his shirt and from under his floppy fishing hat. He taught me what to look for (good colors and lots of them). He let me buy some nice Akro corkscrews for a price befitting a young teenager with no job and a genuine interest. He kept my interest fed and before long I somehow got a Grist's book on marbles. It was a thin and small book, and mainly focused on handmades with a few peltiers and akros in the back under the minimal machine made section. I still have that book. I was in middle schooI with no job, but picked up bicycles from the dumpsters at the end of the road and bought unclaimed ones at the police auctions every year and fixed them to resell and used some of that money to buy marbles when I could find them at flea markets and yard sales. I would ask every vendor that looked likely if they had marbles. I had an old samsonite travel case that I kept my marbles in, all sorted in cardboard jewelry boxes with labels telling what was in them. The swirls and other stuff were just in those big round Christmas cookie tins. Every time I found one that was in the book, it topped my fuel tank with enthusiasm until the next find. I graduated from High school and got busy finding my way into a career and marriage and still had marbles on the radar but didn't hunt them much. I knew nobody else in the entire world that collected them at that point and thought it was just a weird thing I did and nobody else cared. I was never into the internet or any of that, always working and fishing and being outdoors. One day I discovered how much stuff really was on ebay and looked for marbles and was amazed at all the handmades that I had held in such high esteem for so many years. Then I found this board, AAM, and LOM and a few others... wow, there were other people who were really into marbles! I got to looking and found that many of the machine made marbles had ways to be identified, so I started catching up. Then the big digs at Alley happened and I was instantly into learning swirls. I went about that route for many years until I got invited by Ron S to dig Heaton. And it has been doing nothing but steadily gaining momentum since then, digging multiple sites and meeting many people, most of them pure gold. Still constantly learning and finding new things, and that's what drives me. The best hobby ever and I've pursued many through the years alongside mibology. It's the one thing I haven't lost interest in over time.
  15. I think it's another Heaton.
  16. Davis is the only one I know of that did this color.
  17. One of the biggest hints is those big chunks or flakes of AV. That isn't found in old swirls generally.
  18. #1 in the OP I thought was the same marble as the big photos under it and I missed it. It does look a lot like a MK color tip. Except I don't think I've seen one with a yellow patch on one end and blue on the other. I've seen two yellow patches with transparent blue between them. I guess exact measurement might help. The CRs were made with a yellow patch on one end and blue on the other, so for me that's how I lean for now. Edit to add: I have not seen that many color tips to compare to, so take the above for what it's worth.
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