These are harder to find than regular paperweight marbles and in fact are among the most valuable of all hand made marbles.
Marble pontil types.
These are covered in the combination pontilsection.
60 different bidders on the phone live and online competed to be the proud owner of.
In this technique the glassmaker would blow into a round mass of molten glass attached to the end of a blowpipe.
After the marble was made the creator ground the pontil mark down to create the slightly rough yet flat mark on the bottom.
Feel the pontil mark and determine how rough it is.
This would leave a rough patch called.
Regular ground melted pinpoint fold pinch and crease.
Most vintage marbles were made by hand through the process called glassblowing.
This type is fairly rare.
One other type of.
After the marble was made the creator ground the pontil mark down to create the slightly rough yet flat mark on the bottom.
Once the glob would shape into its desired size the maker would cut the marble off the pipe.
The first three are handmade marbles the last three are machine made marbles.
Once done the stick is broken on its end.
Round pontil marks with a slightly rough texture that are still fairly smooth indicate what is known as a ground pontil mark according to akron marbles.
The glassblowing technique was instrumental in the making of marbles in the earlier days.
This leaves a tiny rough patch on the marble which is known as the.
Regular pontil transitionals have a pontil on one end that looks just like the pontil on a handmade marble.
Millefiori marbles are a type of paperweight marble in which instead of having flecks of glass there will be a layer of millefiori canes.
There are six basic types of pontil.
Watch for unusual sizes of marbles.
Here are some ways to determine if a marble is vintage or not.
Some bottles exhibit what appears to be two types of pontil scars at once.
Pontil marks are rounder and do not follow a pattern.
Feel the pontil mark and determine how rough it is.
Bennington pottery marbles are brown or blue or a combination of brown and blue and are common in small sizes.
Two inches and larger and one half inch or less are sizes that may make an ordinary marble a rare one.
During this procedure a stick is used where the marble is attached.
Each section includes information on the processes that produced the scar alternative naming and pictured examples.
Look for the pontil.