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et cetera

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Posts posted by et cetera

  1. Interesting find for sure!  Hard to see much detail, but that black opal could be a real winner.  I would want a certified gemologist to take a look at everything for certification and valuation.  The light green square 'cushion cut' example is not a Peridot (wrong shade of green) but looking at the weak color saturation and minimal faceting I would guess possibly Hiddenite  (very soft - difficult to facet).  Just speculation but the watery green shade looks right.  Could also be Fluorite but the clarity seems high for that. 

    hiddenite-ring.webp

  2. I remember seeing this episode well before I started collecting marbles.  At that time I would have never picked up on the fact that they were using what looks like 1930s -40s Alleys when this episode was set in the 1870s.  Being poor rural farmers children they would have never been using glass marbles of any kind - but rather clay 'commies'.  I loved this show, and being an 'old soul' I would fantasize about how cool it would be to live like the Ingalls family.  Simple, honest living and pretty happy with what they had.  Thanks for sharing!

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  3. I have no use for any organized worship or religion personally.  No disrespect to those that feel the need to worship 'something'.  Spirituality is not connected to a thing, place, label, person, story, symbol or any religious deity to me. It comes from within yourself.  Living your life with kindness and respect to all that is our world is what real spirituality is to me.  If you look at history (even though today) organized religions have been the crux of much hate, war, greed and destruction.  John Lennon was right IMHO....."imagine no religion"......... !

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  4. Just to elaborate a bit;  CAC sure did make batch glass, as did all of the major early USA marble makers.   CAC was located just across the alley from the famed glasshouse 'Cambridge Glass Co.' from whom they acquired numerous colors of scrap cullet for marble making. This cullet made for some unique glass colorations only found in Christensen Agate Co. marbles.  The National Museum of Cambridge Glass has on display a fine assortment of CAC marbles along with a brief story of this glass connection between the two glass-works so long ago. A photo of the CAC marble display at the National Cambridge Glass Museum:

    IMG_8701.JPG

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  5. Thank you AvvaRae!  I don't consider my marbles as an investment really, and I don't plan on selling them anytime soon - too much fun!  Being a quality vs./ quantity type collector my goal is to collect a single fine specimen of each type from all the early USA makers with a few German HMs thown in.  I donate the common duplicates to various charities. This goal might take the rest of my life but I'll enjoy every second of it!.  Hey, the way prices are going for premium examples of vintage marbles these may turn into a good investment after all - BONUS!! 

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  6. Honestly I am not much of a social media type person with sharing photos and such, in fact I don't even really know how!  Just a history buff/glass lover/ research freak here!  When I say I USED to collect early glass I am taking 25-30 years ago and the bulk of my collection has been sold off by now.  I always kept the angle of investment for my glass purchases right next to my love for it, and no regrets. I retired early thanks to wise choices in buying and selling. 

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  7. I bought a jar of old marbles at an auction years ago because they were so colorful and no one else bid on them.   I had collected and studied EAPG and antique fine French glass for years  - but it takes up so much room and the cost was getting outrageous.  Marbles are small and easy to display and store. The colors and patterns are endless, and the research and learning are a challenge that I enjoy. If anybody thinks collecting high end marbles is expensive try looking at prices for Galle, Daum and Lalique, or early American Sandwich glass!  Collecting marbles is the perfect way for me to feed my love of old glass without breaking the bank (with self control of couse!). I found this forum while conducting research. 

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