They’re definitely clay. I just can’t tell if they’re of them Todd/Burt/USPC variety, C&J, or Paulson. I thought they were the first, but the weight has me second guessing myself.Look clay to me.
A picture of the edges would help.
Sorry, my bad. I was thinking your original question was whether they were clay or plastics. These are clay, but you already knew that! I'm gonna try to do some more searching. I do remember reading about the difference between the clay versions, but I can't remember specifically which is which.@Marius L Any opinion?
Starburst hot-stamp belongs to Paulson.Glad someone asked this question. I came across a handful of these in a recent auction. These are honestly great great chips but wasn’t sure on the manufacturer.
LOL. Thanks goodness the "expert" weighted inLooks like Paulson to me!
LOL. Thanks goodness the "expert" weighted in. Welcome to PCF @nighthawk1990 .
Those diamond mold chips in the above photos with the grooves are almost definitely Paulson made. That is a signature trait of Paulson, as they used a lathe that leaves those marks, while Burt/ASM/CPC has always used a grinder.
For the @BamaT8ter chips, I would also guess that they are are Burt Co. made, and from the later Christy & Jones era (from between 1952 and 1966) when Burt more commonly used mold cups with larger diamonds. The font on the BVA chip also makes me think it is a Christy & Jones chip. It is not a font that was typically used by Paulson. A long time ago, Howard Herz published a list of commonly used Paulson fonts, and I don't think that BVA font is one of them. Hard to be sure with some of the fonts because only a couple of letters are shown in his publication.
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You clearly know a LOT more than I do about chips. Can you give me your guess on who made these chips?Those diamond mold chips in the above photos with the grooves are almost definitely Paulson made. That is a signature trait of Paulson, as they used a lathe that leaves those marks, while Burt/ASM/CPC has always used a grinder.
For the @BamaT8ter chips, I would also guess that they are are Burt Co. made, and from the later Christy & Jones era (from between 1952 and 1966) when Burt more commonly used mold cups with larger diamonds. The font on the BVA chip also makes me think it is a Christy & Jones chip. It is not a font that was typically used by Paulson. A long time ago, Howard Herz published a list of commonly used Paulson fonts, and I don't think that BVA font is one of them. Hard to be sure with some of the fonts because only a couple of letters are shown in his publication.
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Joe Treybal Sporting Goods Company, St. Louis MO. ( 3 balls and a long dash, repeated four times.)You clearly know a LOT more than I do about chips. Can you give me your guess on who made these chips?View attachment 882526View attachment 882527View attachment 882527
Holy cow! You're a damn chip encyclopedia!!Joe Treybal Sporting Goods Company, St. Louis MO. ( 3 balls and a long dash, repeated four times.)
for future reference:Holy cow! You're a damn chip encyclopedia!!
You mean to tell me he just has a better understanding of the internet??!! I believe that too!for future reference:
http://www.antiquegamblingchips.com/molddesignindex_site.htm
TRI-BAL (a/k/a 3 DOTS & DASH, and TREY-BALL)
I have a little that I can add. The actual chips were most likely made by the United States Playing Card Co., during the 1930s or early 1940s, and sent to the Joe Treybal Sporting Goods Co. (St. Louis, MO) who owned the mold and hot stamped the chips. A lot of their chips were sold to clients in the Mid-West.You clearly know a LOT more than I do about chips. Can you give me your guess on who made these chips?
For the record every single one of your posts I have ever seen have been absolutely amazing. Just stopped by to ask if the house next door to you is available for purchase? LolI dug a bit more into how late Joe Treybal sold chips on his proprietary mold. It may have been as late as 1952. A news article about the 6/15/1952 fire mentions that a large volume of celluloid (for dice) and poker chips fueled the blaze (the relevant paragraphs posted below). Not conclusive, but it could have been those chips.
The USPC Co. transferred many of their molds to the Burt Co. in 1946 or 1947. There is no record of Burt having manufactured chips on the Treybal mold. Burt order cards, however, from that time period were destroyed in a 1954 factory fire. There is a 1962 document that list "Treyball" as one of the molds in their possession, so it was apparently transferred to Burt by USPC in 1946/47. It is possible, I suppose that Burt could have briefly made chips on the mold (1947-1952). I don't know however, of any Treybal chips that are dated that late.
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Thoughts?
Most definitely Paulson.