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How to list insulators on eBay or anywhere.
This is only a brief discussion of these subjects for you to get the general idea. More information can be found in Insulator price guides, collector books, magazines, and software.
What are insulator collectors looking for?
Choosing the correct category
Your listing title
Insulator pictures
Insulator measurements
Insulator material
Insulator color
Insulator features inside glass
Insulator surfaces
Insulator base types
Exact insulator markings
Insulator marking types
Insulator damage
Fake, Altered, Repaired, etc.
Insulator listing sample and html code
 
Choosing the correct category.
Your listing title.
You may have seen insulator titles with numbers that might start out with CD, U, or M. Such as CD102, U-590, etc. If you don't know the number for your insulator, don't worry too much about it, the collectors buying it will. If you want more information on CD numbers and identification, buy the book that all glass insulator collectors own: For more information on U and M numbers and identification for porcelain insulators, this site and his books are the place to go:
Some porcelain insulator colors are brown, white, dark brown, sky, gray, blue, green, mustard, yellow, red, butterscotch, red-brown, chocolate-brown, etc.
Plastic insulators are usually white or black.
Colors are affected by your monitor, background, light sources, your camera settings, different light angles, blah, blah... The best way to see and judge the color without going crazy for glass insulators is to hold your insulator up in a well lit room with a white background. If the glass insulator is so dark you can't see through it, then try placing a white light directly under or behind it to shine through.
Remember...
Insulator features inside glass.
Milk: looks like milk suspended inside the insulator in the form of
Amber: reddish or brownish color inside the insulator in the form of
Fizz: when tiny bubbles are so concentrated it appears to be fizzing,
Speck: I use this term to describe any tiny particle that obviously
Snow: a high concentration of tiny white specks
Streamer: a flowing line of very tiny bubbles
Bubble: trapped air inside the glass bigger than seed bubbles
Seed Bubble: a tiny bubble about the size of a pin head
Junk: any object that can't be identified embedded inside the glass
If your insulator has any of these features, it is a must that you list them, as they always raise an eyebrow or two.
Smooth Base: a base with a smooth surface
Corrugated Base: smooth base that has intentionally been textured
Rounded Base: smooth base that has a rounded edge around the outside
Sharp Drip Points: base with cone shaped projections or "teeth"
Round Drip Points: base with ball shaped projections or "beads"
Flat Drip Points: base with drip points that have been flattened on the end
Continuous Drip: base that is higher on one side than the other and actually causes the insulator to lean
Wedge Drip Points: base with wide wedge shaped drip points
Corrugated Drip Points: base with corrugated or "ribbed" drip points
Grooved base: Smooth Base with a continuous V-shaped groove in the middle
Base Embossed: smooth base with embossed markings
Base types can be deceiving, even with great pictures. Describing the base avoids confusion.
Dome - Very top section of an insulator
Crown - Section of insulator between dome and wire groove
Wire Groove - Continuous groove around outside of insulator
Skirt - Section of insulator from wire groove to base
Base - The very bottom surface of an insulator
Dome: 3
If there is more than one line on a single location, use some fancy html, note it or just use a slash (/):
Front Skirt: WHITALL TATUM CO.-98 (WT in a triangle)/Made IN U.S.A.
note: the (WT in a triangle) above is the logo for Whitall Tatum Co.
Also, make sure to get all the periods, quotation marks, dots, symbols, or any other type of marking accurately described. I could go on forever about markings, but that would take, well, forever. Browse the EIM lists to get an idea of what other listings look like.
Embossed: raised from the surface of the insulator
Incuse: recessed into the surface of the insulator
Under-glaze: for porcelain insulators, ink stamp under the glaze.
Sand Blast: for porcelain insulators, made by sand blasting the finished insulator to make a dull marking
Recessed-embossed: has a recessed area surrounding embossed marking
Slug-embossed: embossed onto a raised surface or band
Make sure the word "insulator" is in your title. It's sure to be the first word most collectors will search for, and you don't want to be on the selling end of the dreaded "hidden" insulator. Make sure you spell it correctly, too!
Check out the hidden insulator page!
Price Guide for Insulators: A History and Guide
to North American Glass Pintype Insulators
John and Carol McDougald
R=Infinity - Unipart and Multipart Porcelain Insulators
Maintained by Elton Gish
I, and most other collectors, would only buy insulators without seeing a picture from a well known collector or friend. A good picture is crucial to selling your insulator.
Use a white background to show the best color. Collectors are aware of different backgrounds, lighting sources, different computer monitors, etc, and how they can affect the color of the insulator in the photo. More on this in the color section.
Several different views are great but not really necessary. If you are only adding one picture, you should hold the camera at the same height as the insulator to show the best profile. This is so collectors will be able to correctly identify the insulator.
Any of the descriptions below can be inhanced by a picture, but could take some time experimenting with several angles, camera settings and light sources.
A few insulators are the same or close to the same shape but different sizes. Measurements are especially important in identifying porcelain insulators. Also, you may have an odd insulator that is not yet listed in any book. It is a good practice to always include the width and height.
Measure the overall width across the insulator's base and the total height from base to dome.
Well, this sounds like a "no-brainer", but a few insulators have the same or similar shape, but made from different materials. If you don't list what it's made of and it isn't apparent from your photo, you will get asked. The most common materials are glass, porcelain, plastic and rubber. Also notable are some wood, iron, and composition insulator materials. Good idea to note the material in your title or description.
Whoa, man, I hate this section. I have decided that plain ol' aqua is my favorite color!
Anyway, this is very important to a lot of collectors, and above all the hardest to describe.
To barely scratch the surface:
Some glass colors are aqua, clear, green, blue, cobalt blue, purple, sage, celery green, hemingray blue, blue aqua, green aqua, off clear, smoke, gray, amber, golden amber, emerald green, lemon, yellow, and on and on and on.....
Add prefixes...light, dark, ice (ice blue is clear with barely a hint of blue)
And dont forget tint...blue tint (more clear than light blue but darker than ice blue)
Further descriptions include tiger stripes, streaks, mottling, speckled, and more.
Some glass and porcelain insulators have two or more distinct colors.
Rubber insulators are usually black.
Wood insulators are usually wood. lol
It may be helpful to use a well known object of the same color to describe it. I have seen Windex Blue, Sky Blue, Pea Green, etc.
Even after you have chosen an accurate color to describe the insulator as you see it on your monitor, the collector's monitor may show a different color. This is why you should try to be as accurate as possible with your color description.
Above all, just do your best and over time it will get easier.
Milk, amber, fizz, specks, snow, streamers, bubbles, seed bubbles, junk: all of these are just a few common anomalies found inside insulators as described by collectors. A lot of folks are looking for nothing but the cool special effects and character given to insulators by these features. Without getting too detailed I will attempt an explanation of each:
small traces, lines, bands, streaks, waterfalls, swirls, tadpoles
and the big globs, affectionately known as snotsmall traces, lines, bands, streaks, globs, etc.
almost like a beer or soda
isn't a bubble
Insulator surfaces are usually smooth and uniform, except of course, for the mold lines and straw marks. Straw marks refer to the creases or indented lines that snake across the surface of a lot of glass insulators. These were made during manufacture and are not considered damage. If straw marks are extreme you should list them as such.
Occasionally, you may come across one that has a rough textured surface all over. Some glass insulators have this whittled look, as if they were whittled out of a block of wood with Grampa's pocket knife. Consider this surface effect a bonus and list it.
The base of an insulator is the bottom surface as it sits upright. A few different types and their description are:
Finally, my favorite. Markings on insulators are important. Date of manufacture, mold numbers, style numbers, company names and more can be learned from an insulator's markings. You should type your markings exactly as you see them. If you come to a symbol, logo, backwards number, just make a note to describe it. You should be familiar with these basic locations of insulators.
Now that we got that out of the way, it is just as important to say where each marking is located. As in:
Front Skirt: HEMINGRAY-71
Rear Skirt: MADE IN U.S.A.
Rear Skirt: PATENTED/MAY 7, 1636
EIM HOME
While nearly all glass insulators have the embossed type marking, porcelain insulators have many different types of markings. It is a great help in determining the age of the insulator if you describe the marking type. The most common types of markings are described below.
Up to index
Fleabite: tiny dimple or pock mark about the size of a pin head on surface
Scratch: line on surface from abrasion
Wire Rub: material worn off on or near wire groove
Roughness: any spot where the insulator doesn't seem to be as smooth as it should
Chip: small chunks of material missing
Chunk: larger pieces of material missing
Flake: thin sliver or slice of material missing from surface
Bruise: material has been impacted and cracked but no missing material
Crack: line in material from stress, no missing material
Open Bubble: bubble that is on the surface or close enough to the
Here is an example of a simple insulator listing that
you can copy from and use for your listing.
Here is a nice insulator I found at an estate sale.
Displays great!
Very minor damage as listed.
| Material: | Glass |
| Color: | Hemingray Blue |
| Height x Width: | 4" x 3-3/4" |
| Base type: | Round drip points |
Exact Markings:
| Front Skirt: | HEMINGRAY-16 |
| Rear Skirt: | MADE IN U.S.A. |
Damage:
 
Html code for the listing above you can modify here, then copy and paste into your ad. Look for the lines that start with: Type your ... and replace that whole line with your information. Of course, you can take out sections you don't need or add some you do. If you need to copy more than one, just hit the reset button to return it to the original code.
Half inch chunk missing near wire groove on the rear.