A guide for collector marbles gives you the various types of marbles and their values. You can use the guide to help you determine which marbles you wish to collect and how much the ones you have collected are worth.
Types of Handmade Glass Collector Marbles
Handmade collector marbles are found in a wide range of types and designs. All handmade marbles aren't glass since the most ancient marbles were made of clay. A few of the vast types of handmade glass marbles include Swirls, End of Days, Banded Opaques, Clambroths, Indians, Lutzes, Sulphides and Moonies.
Swirl Marble Designs
There are many types of swirl marbles. Each marble design has specific attributes that define it and make it a desirable collectible.
Core Swirls
A Core Swirl marble feature inner swirls of color within a base colored marble. The different colored canes are twisted to create the swirls.
Solid Core Swirl
The Solid Core Swirl marble has a clear base, but the spacing of the one-colored or several colored bands/strands of color are closely packed together; you can't see any clear spaces within the core.
How to Determine Value of Solid Core Swirls
Most Solid Core Swirls have outer layers of bands/strands. If you have a naked (without the outer layer) Solid Core Swirl marble, or if the base is colored, you possess a rare marble.
Divided Ribbon Core Swirls
The Divided Ribbon Core Swirl is formed by three, sometimes more separate bands. The bands form a core with clear spaces in between each band. These swirls feature an outer layer of bands/strands.
How to Determine Divided Ribbon Core Swirl Marble Value
There are a few things that determine the value of a Divided Ribbon Core Swirl Marble. The better the outer bands duplicate core spaces, the more prized the marble is. Five to six bands are rarer than a three to four banded core. For example, a large divided four-ribbon core marble sold for around $149.
Latticinio Core Swirls
Like the name, this marble design features a lattice shaped core. The most common lattice color is white, although rarer Latticinio marbles are orange, yellow and green with other bands/strands. An excellent condition white lattice marble sells for around $10. A large, yellow latticino swirl sold for around $80.
How to Determine Value of Latticinio Core Swirl Marble
One of the rarest Latticinio Core Swirl marbles is a left-hand twist. If you have a Latticinio core swirl marble featuring a red or blue core, then you have the rarest of all designs and a higher valued marble. Rarer specimens feature four and five layers of swirls.
Ribbon Core Swirls
Ribbon Core Swirls marbles feature wide swirls with the core ribbon created by several strands of one color, although some may feature several colors. The center color band is typically flat.
Evaluating Ribbon Core Swirls Marble
The Ribbon Corn Swirls can feature outer ribbon swirls or be naked (no outer ribbon swirls). The most common marbles feature a double ribbon core while a single ribbon core is rarer.
Coreless or Banded Swirls
A coreless or banded swirl marble features outer strands/bands of swirls. The core doesn't have any swirls. The marble base is usually clear, green or blue.
Value of Coreless or Banded Swirls
The swirls are usually different colors and the more colors used for the swirls, the more valuable the marble is. Marbles that feature no spaces between the colors are the most prized as collectibles. A few of these include:
- Joseph's Coat features bands around a clear or colored base with thin swirls tightly placed with no space between them. The mint condition marbles sold for around $190 and an average specimen sold for around $40.
- Gooseberry Swirl base glass is usually amber colored and features clear glass swirls equally spaced to white subsurface bands. The rarer base glass colors are green, blue or clear. A shooter brown base Gooseberry Swirl marble sold for $80 in 2007.
- Peppermint Swirl features subsurface strands/bands of two opaque/white wide bands with two to three intermittent pink stripes that alternate with blue stripes usually thinner but can be wide. A good condition, used Peppermint Swirl marble sold for around $30.
Banded Opaque Marble
A banded opaque marble features an opaque base with a colored swirl. An opaque marble with multi-colored swirls is rare.
Clambroth, a Very Rare Marble
A clambroth is made of hard and soft glass and features an opaque base with swirls of eight to eighteen bands/strands equally spaced. This marble is a very rare find. A Clambroth marble with green stripes sold for around $142.
Indian
The Indian marble is typically a black opaque base with colored bands/strands and mica flecks. A black opaque with colored bands sold for around $64. The swirls run from one pole to the other. The End of Days Indian is a rare type that features broken, stretched flecks.
Lutzes
Lutz is finely ground copper flakes or goldstone that's used with a transparent clear base glass. If you find a Lutz with a transparent colored base, you have a rare find.
- Banded Lutz has a colored glass base with two sets of double bands featuring white opaque band/strands for edgings. If you find a marble with an opaque base glass, you've come upon a rare marble. A Banded Opaque Lutz marble sold for around $78.
- Onionskin Lutz features Lutz bands and often lutz flakes at the core. An Onionskin Lutz marble sold for around $121.
- Ribbon Lutz features lutz edging along a naked single or double ribbon core swirl. A transparent Ribbon Lutz marble with obvious wear sold for around $300.
- Mist Lutz is a clear transparent base marble with a transparent colored core. Lutz fakes form a layer below the marble surface, and also has Lutz flakes floating between the core and the layer. A very rare black Mist Lutz marble in near mint condition sold for around $350.
End of Day Marbles
The End of Day marbles were made from the end of the day's leftover glass bits and pieces. These marbles weren't marketed and ended up as giveaways to the workers' children. Since these marbles were made from scraps, each one turned out to be unique. The base was either transparent or colored. It might have a core or be coreless. However, the core was simple flecks of different colored glass bits.
- End of Day Clouds feature a transparent base with a colored base core or coreless and colored flecks. An End of Day Cloud marble sold for around $180.
- End of Day Mist marbles have transparent/translucent bases and colored flecks with colored transparent bands encasing the entire marble. You'll need to keep a close watch for this type of marble to come up on auction and resell collector websites.
- End of Day Paneled Onionskin marble features two panels stretched and two panels of flecks. Marbles with less that four panels are rare. A 4-panel End of Day Onionskin marble sold for around $100.
Submarine, a Rare Marble
The Submarine marble is a mix of several styles, such as flecks, panels, and other features. It always has a transparent base glass. If you find a Submarine marble, you'll end up with a very rare marble. A translucent Peltier Green Submarine marble sold for around $15.
Sulphides
A Sulphide marble features a transparent base with a figurine centered inside the marble. The figurine is often an animal, human figurines (bust of full bodied), flowers, and other objects. The figurines were thought to be made of Sulphur, but they are made from clay. A rare Sulphide find contains two figures known as doubles. A Vintage Sulphide Cat marble sold around $79.
Other Types of Handmade Glass Marbles
There are other types of handmade glass marbles that don't follow the same design rules as other glass marbles. These include:
- A Clearie marble is made from one transparent color. A collection of 23 Clearies sold for around $10.
- A Mica marble is made from a transparent glass base and features mica flakes inside. A Vintage Mica Marble sold for around $320.
- An Opaque marble is made from one opaque color. A Christensen slag opaque Imperial Jade marble sold for around $100.
Akro Agate Company Marblesa
Akro Agate Company created many marbles that are collectibles. These were made from opalescent glass that the company dubbed, Opals. Today, these collectibles are referred to as Flinties and Moonies. Other names included Corkscrews, Cats Eye, Popeye, Brick, Beach Ball, and others. A Popeye Corkscrew marble sold for around $16.
Aggies
Aggies were marbles that are made from agate. It became a common name used for almost any type of stone marble. Many times, Aggies were colored with mineral dyes to create a range of green, blue, black, gray and yellow marbles. A Christensen Agate Company marble sold for around $15.
Bennington and China Marbles
While ancient Roman marbles were made of clay, later marble designs also used clay. Bennington marbles were salt glazed clay marbles. The glaze created what are called little eyes (pits). A group of 24 Vintage Bennington clay marbles sold for around $15. China marbles were made from dense white clay and were painted with colorful designs. Of the three types of clay marbles, the China marbles are considered more collectibles. A Vintage lot of Bennington China marble sold for $8.50.
Steelies
A popular must have, was the steelie. These novelty marbles were ball bearings that were relegated to be used as marbles. A grouping of 50 steelies sold for around $15.
What Marbles Are Worth Money?
As with any collectible, the trend for what is considered valuable depends on the rarity and demand of the marble. The marbles that are rare finds certainly will be worth more money.
History of Collector Marbles
The history of collector marbles goes back to ancient Rome. The popularity of marbles has withstood the test of time.
Roman Empire
Collector marbles have been around in some form since the Roman Empire. Various Roman writers mention marbles throughout their works, and archaeological digs have uncovered early marbles made from clay and then baked in primitive ovens. These marbles often had markings to distinguish them as belonging to one person, and they were used in all types of games.
Germany
Throughout the next several hundred years, artisans fashioned marbles out of wood, stone and other materials. These marbles had to be cut and molded by hand, which made them more expensive than most people could afford. In 1848, a German glassblower determined a way to make marbles out of glass with a more efficient method. He developed a tool, called a marble scissors, that would allow him to make marbles quickly so that they could be sold to the public.
United States
The United States became a hot marble market quickly, but that took a downturn when World War I ended German imports. American glassblowers stepped in to find a way to mass produce marbles. They developed machinery to do it, and manufacturers still use these types of machines to drop out marbles quickly.
Judging Collector Marbles
Collector marbles come in all sizes. Though the standard used in children's play is about one-half inch in diameter, marbles do come in many other sizes as well. Collecting marbles is about finding unique designs and rare availability. Several factors go into making this determination.
Shape
Marbles will be worth more money if they are completely rounded. For older marbles, the roundness indicates the amount of time an artisan put into making the toy. More time means a better shape and more value. With newer models, perfectly round marbles have been well kept. Because the marbles are machine made, they start out round but can get chipped over time.
Popularity
Today's marbles are pretty basic. They are made of agate or glass and come in all colors and designs. There are thousands of marbles of each design produced. Marbles of yesteryear, though, are more unique. Collector marbles that are very rare will fetch a larger amount of money. Many of these marbles can be worth hundreds of dollars, with the rarest ones worth thousands.
Packaging
Most marbles do not come in packaging, or they have basic netting bags. Others are sold in tins or boxes and having these packages intact and with the marble increases the value of the item.
Deciding Which Collector Marbles You Wish to Collect
Once you begin to delve into the various types of collector marbles, you can decide which marbles you wish to collect. You may wish to start out with a few prized marbles and augment your collection with more common marble designs.