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 1.
Pontil marks on marbles.
Find handmade marbles that likely came from the same cane.
Feel the pontil mark and determine how rough it is.
Pontil marks round pontil mark circular slightly rough mark on the bottom of an item caused by the removal of the item from the glass blowing rod.
After many years of trading and playing for keeps pairs of marbles.
Feel the pontil mark and determine how rough it is.
Rare marbles have small white figures of people or animals in their center and are very collectible.
Pontil marks are rounder and do not follow a pattern.
Look for single pontil handmade art glass marbles as these marbles were at the top of the cane and there was only one for each cane that produced several marbles with two pontil marks.
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.
Transitional is the term used to collectively describe a variety of slag type marbles that have pontils or shear marks on them.
Amongst this type are the earliest german marbles the earliest american made marbles as well as marbles from japan and china the term transitional applies to most slag type marbles that have one pontil.
After the marble was made the creator ground the pontil mark down to create the.
Transitionalis the term used to collectively describe a variety of slag type marbles that have pontils or shear marks on them amongst this type are the earliest german marbles the earliest american made marbles as well as marbles from japan and china melted pontil transitionalswere made using a process patented by j h.
After the marble was made the creator ground the pontil mark down to create the slightly rough yet flat mark on the bottom.
Collect matching pairs or twins.
Look at the center design.
Rough pontil mark raised sometimes sharp mark or scar on the bottom of a blown glass item caused by the removal of the item from the glass blowing rod.
Before the late 18th century and continued to be common on a large majority of bottles up until the american civil war.
Some utilitarian bottles though a.
Found on blown and blown mold items.
These marks are called pontil marks and were created when the glassmaker cut the glass rod from which the marble was made.
A pontil mark or punt mark is the scar where the pontil punty or punt was broken from a work of blown glass the presence of such a scar indicates that a glass bottle or bowl was blown freehand while the absence of a punt mark suggests either that the mark has been obliterated or that the work was mold blown.