Parmcat Posted June 20 Report Share Posted June 20 Not sure again about this. Not sure if the round mark is etched in, or it's a mark from firing. There are a lot very similar to this one, in the bag I bought Glazed 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ric Posted June 20 Report Share Posted June 20 That looks like a German hand-made glass game marble or ballot ball to me. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Parmcat Posted June 20 Author Report Share Posted June 20 9 minutes ago, Ric said: That looks like a German hand-made glass game marble or ballot ball to me. Are German hand made glass the same time frame as the clays? More or less prevalent? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akroorka Posted June 20 Report Share Posted June 20 10 minutes ago, Parmcat said: Are German hand made glass the same time frame as the clays? This one is actually glass imho. It may be a ballot box marble or game marble. (these came in black and white--the ballot box marbles, one color meant Yes--the other No) Notice the grind marks and the little twisting twirl in your first image. These are both commonly found in Old German handmade glass marbles. Nice find imho—does light shine through it? Marble—On!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Parmcat Posted June 21 Author Report Share Posted June 21 2 hours ago, akroorka said: This one is actually glass imho. It may be a ballot box marble or game marble. (these came in black and white--the ballot box marbles, one color meant Yes--the other No) Notice the grind marks and the little twisting twirl in your first image. These are both commonly found in Old German handmade glass marbles. Nice find imho—does light shine through it? Marble—On!! Doesn't appear that light shines through this one 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
akroorka Posted June 21 Report Share Posted June 21 Well, I still think that this one is glass. @Alan never seems to be one to stay out of the way out of correcting/advising on any ID--including me (which I appreciate). I always appreciate all opinions and I learn from them as well. Marble--On!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alan Posted June 22 Report Share Posted June 22 Consider the possibility (however small) that it may not be clay. In the pics (which may be different than in-hand) the graining seems exceptionally dense and fine - and therefore hard. I think there is a possibility that it could be porcelain. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Parmcat Posted June 22 Author Report Share Posted June 22 6 hours ago, Alan said: Consider the possibility (however small) that it may not be clay. In the pics (which may be different than in-hand) the graining seems exceptionally dense and fine - and therefore hard. I think there is a possibility that it could be porcelain. Now we're getting crazy....lol 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ric Posted June 23 Report Share Posted June 23 Alan doesn't say a lot but when he does, I pay attention. And revisiting this marble with closer scrutiny, I think I see what he sees. The overall shape of the marble looks a tad lumpy for glass. I also see some surface aberrations that look a bit more like "cracking" in glaze rather than scratching in glass. I may have focused too much on that little rotary "nubbin" in the upper right photo, which is something I have never seen on a porcelain marble before. It's an interesting example. I recommend you calculate it's volume, weigh it, determine it's density, and report back. 😁 Of course, I'm kidding - see if you can find a little divot on it and look at with magnification. If it's porcelain, it should be fairly obvious. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Parmcat Posted June 23 Author Report Share Posted June 23 10 minutes ago, Ric said: Alan doesn't say a lot but when he does, I pay attention. And revisiting this marble with closer scrutiny, I think I see what he sees. The overall shape of the marble looks a tad lumpy for glass. I also see some surface aberrations that look a bit more like "cracking" in glaze rather than scratching in glass. I may have focused too much on that little rotary "nubbin" in the upper right photo, which is something I have never seen on a porcelain marble before. It's an interesting example. I recommend you calculate it's volume, weigh it, determine it's density, and report back. 😁 Of course, I'm kidding - see if you can find a little divot on it and look at with magnification. If it's porcelain, it should be fairly obvious. I have a handful of these that all look similar. I am going to take some time to clean one if them off and try to get better pictures if the markings. This is the first I've heard about porcelain marbles. Where they made at the same time as glass/clay type stuff? That's is really blowing me away, and I can't believe how much fun I'm having playing with marbles Thanks again! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now