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A Bunch Of Round Things

A Bunch Of Round Things

Posted by Eugene Rain on 10/30/2004
Marbles! All made of borosilicate glass, and properly annealed in state of the art glassblowing equipment. Take a look, these are guaranteed to stimulate the imagination!

Images

Browse Sub-Pages of A Bunch Of Round Things

Eugene Rain Signature Marbles

Eugene Rain Signature Marbles

Eugene Rain signature designs.
(4 sub-pages)
Space Scene Marbles

Space Scene Marbles

Who doesn't love space? Now you can reach out and grab it, in one of our marbles.
(3 sub-pages)
Flower Marbles

Flower Marbles

Flower Marbles made by Eugene Rain
(9 sub-pages)
Bouquets!

Bouquets!

Bouquets of flowers and roses.
(12 sub-pages)
Eye Marbles

Eye Marbles

Eye marbles! What a fun creepy thing to add to your glass collection.
(8 sub-pages, 1 comment)
Reticello Marbles

Reticello Marbles

Reticello Marbles by Eugene Rain
(5 sub-pages, 2 comments)
Vortex Marbles

Vortex Marbles

Vortex marbles made by Eugene Rain
(8 sub-pages)
Honeycomb Marbles

Honeycomb Marbles

Different honeycomb marbles by Eugene Rain
(11 sub-pages)
Air Implosion and Air trap Marbles

Air Implosion and Air trap Marbles

Air marbles!
(8 sub-pages)
Ghost and Shadow Marbles

Ghost and Shadow Marbles

Ghosts and shadows are so much fun. An infinite amount of views you can get from these, with one little turn!
(1 sub-page)
Uranium marbles

Uranium marbles

Uranium glass has a rich history. The earliest use of it appears to date back to Ancient Egypt, since it was reportedly found in a pharaoh’s tomb. It was beginning to be widely used in the early 1800’s, although its formal discovery is usually credited to Josef Riedel in 1834. The next major part of the history of uranium glass occurs in the United States. The most prominent US producer in the late 1800’s and 1900’s was the Corning Company based in New York. Then, in the late 1930’s, production was ceased on some types of uranium glass and severely limited on others, due to the government research on nuclear fission. While the ban on production was lifted eventually, the manufacturers of uranium glass had lost their niche in the market, and, as a result, production is now almost nonexistent, leading to the rarity that has attracted collectors.
(4 sub-pages)
Dichro and Dichro Image Marbles

Dichro and Dichro Image Marbles

by Eugene Rain
(4 sub-pages)
Miscellaneous marbles

Miscellaneous marbles

Marbles that don't fit into any of the above catagories, or that we don't make on a regular basis.
(5 sub-pages)



 Artist:   Eugene Rain  Contact Artist 
Eugene Rain
Glass art guaranteed to stimulate the imagination.

Visit http://www.talkglass.com for anything you want to know about lampworking.

Misha Whisenand
 CA  
http://www.EugeneRain.com


Comments
  • Robin Moore
    Beautiful Marbles
    Robin Moore: These are truly original marbles, it's great to see so many Momka colors put to work. Keep up the great work.
    11/20/2004 11:58 PM
  • Forward Motion Art
    Beautiful Work!! Love it!
    Forward Motion Art: Love all the work! Very Nice!!!! Thanks for sharing!
    11/27/2009 5:12 PM



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