Well HOLY SMOKES! Here’s how the insulator auction turned out. Now to buy me some Christmas presents!!
-Erin
Purple Glass Problem
So a few years ago I saw this Christmas display that used old glass insulators set on top of a string of lights. It was mega cute. I tried googling an image for you, and the best I could find is this, which is also mega cute:

So I set out collecting insulators. I have a whole bunch now, but have never actually set up said light display. While in the basement today, I dug the insulators out and figured I would look them up on ebay to see if I should sell them.
I should interject here and say that I am still not totally sure what an insulator is/was. I mean, the name is self-explanatory, but what these actually insulated is unclear to me. Something about telephone poles.
I should also add that people EFFING love insulators. The websites and blogspots devoted to these glass phalli ( I thought it was phalluses but I stand corrected) are numerous.
So anyway, in my stash, I had 3 purple insulators. It turns out that these are insanely rare. And valuable. We’re talking way more money than you could even imagine someone would spend on a piece of purple glass that you stick Christmas lights under for decoration. Timmy and Joan bought these for me at an auction for $4.

So of course I immediately listed mine for sale and in the matter of a couple hours they already had 18 watchers and several bids.

And then this happened:

Some glass insulator know-it-all is trying to rain on my purple glass parade. WHO DOES HE THINK HE IS?! I panicked of course and started frantically looking up what the hell “radiated” insulators are. Turns out, the term is actually “irradiated,” so basically I should not trust this guy at all.
Irradiated glass, as it turns out, has literally been placed in the presence of a machine that emits radiation, like an x-ray machine. It turns the glass amazing colors like purple or cobalt blue. The glass will naturally turns these colors if left out in the sun for decades, say, on a telephone pole, but some scammers don’t want to wait for that to happen. They buy cheap insulators and then irradiate them. UGH.
This is a SUPER HOT TOPIC in the glass insulator community and is debated fiercely. I highly recommend poking around here. Here is a taste though:


^^^ UM, ok THIEF. Get down off those telephone poles!

So WTH. Are my insulators fake? I really don’t know. I don’t think so though. Who would go through the trouble of irradiating these and then selling them in an auction for $4?
From what I have read, it is super hard to tell which insulators have been irradiated and which are authentic. The fact that this guy thinks he could tell just by looking at a photo of mine on ebay is sketchy.
I am holding out hope for my little insulators! I will let you know how they end up doing!
-Erin
