Are you kidding me, Are you guys that do this, that disrespect or just that desperate for work???????
Try and justify this, take your best shot.
Try and justify this, take your best shot.
Are you kidding me, Are you guys that do this, that disrespect or just that desperate for work???????
Try and justify this, take your best shot.
Are you kidding me, Are you guys that do this, that disrespect or just that desperate for work???????
Try and justify this, take your best shot.
why do you want to start a thread with this as a subject?
bill
did someone do this to one of your cues Michael???
Are you kidding me, Are you guys that do this, that disrespect or just that desperate for work???????
Try and justify this, take your best shot.
In my opinion; once a cuemaker sells a cue it is no longer his cue. It belongs to the person who paid for it. This new owner has the right to do anything with that cue that pleases him. That includes refinishing the cue, rewrapping the cue, having a new shaft made for that cue, changing the ferrule, changing the tip, changing the weight of that cue or for that matter having new inlays installed into that cue. I have done all of the above and never considered that it could be offensive to the original maker.
I still think the owner of anything has the right to do anything with that item that he pleases, whether it be a custom cue, custom car or anything else.
If it bothers you that another cuemaker would add an inlay to a cue which was made by another maker then maybe you should no longer do any of the work mentioned in paragraph 1 above.
In my opinion; once a cuemaker sells a cue it is no longer his cue. It belongs to the person who paid for it. This new owner has the right to do anything with that cue that pleases him. That includes refinishing the cue, rewrapping the cue, having a new shaft made for that cue, changing the ferrule, changing the tip, changing the weight of that cue or for that matter having new inlays installed into that cue. I have done all of the above and never considered that it could be offensive to the original maker.
I still think the owner of anything has the right to do anything with that item that he pleases, whether it be a custom cue, custom car or anything else.
If it bothers you that another cuemaker would add an inlay to a cue which was made by another maker then maybe you should no longer do any of the work mentioned in paragraph 1 above.
Mike
i don't think this is something to get puffed up about.their is a lot of cue repair going on out there now.the modern customer might get modifications done using different sources.to have intention to buy a cue just to go have a mod done is highly unlikely.it does not happen at my shop.
bill
Mike,
Respect for another's work, I will always, but after the knocking of the work stops most that I know of will do anything.....
Mario
Get the request all the time to add inlays or logo to one of Bill's old cues. Won't do it, and it is obvious as to why.
Inlays add value to a cue, if original, and detract from the value if added after the fact by another cue maker. There is also the issue of disclosure, who knows if after you sell the cue you had inlays added to if the next owner will make the next buyer aware of that fact?
It is also pretty cost prohibitive, and will usually alter the cue's original dimensions. You end up with a cue that is not original in several aspects, and that can only detract from the value.
I am just a case maker but once I sell a case the customer can do anything he wants to it EXCEPT return it to me for any reason if he chooses to modify beyond the purely cosmetic.
I don't see the harm in modifying another person's work with the following criteria. The work should no longer carry the original maker's logo OR it should be accompanied by another logo/signature to inidcate someone else worked on it.
I see from a purely reputational standpoint that modifying someone else's cue can lead to that cue being represented as if it's the original maker's work. Bad if the quality sucks, bad if the original maker doesn't even do any similar work, bad because the original maker has to contend with people asking about it if it's not made perfectly clear.
But at the end of the day it's the customer's property and if another cue maker has the means then why shouldn't they take the business? I personally would not do it just out of liability reasons. One year I took a laser engraver to the big Vegas events and did a LOT of cues some of them very high end. I ruined a pair of cues that were north of $2000 for the set and wiped out a week's worth of profits. That cured me right there of putting anyone else's cues in the laser. I finished out the week and never worked on another person's cue again. The only lasering we do now is on our own cues.
Although I don't really see anything morally wrong here I can see that it's akin to modifying a painting or some other modification of a piece of art. I know that I would be somewhat hurt to see any major mods to my cases although I wouldn't be upset at the leather worker who did the work. Nor would I be upset at the customer. I'd just hate to see my baby disfigured in my eyes. Unless of course they did a really good job then I would steal the idea and use it myself.
Hope this didn't happen to you Mike.
Hi John
Nothing happened to one of my cues, if it did, I would have no problem calling what I consider a money grubbing ho on the phone and voicing my opinion. I'm a pretty respectable person and I don't care how much experience the cue maker had who built the cue, I wouldn't alter the appearance of it by adding inlays to a non inlay ed cue. Today is the age of the Internet and for those who are not known today but know how to work the forums right, they could be world famous tomorrow. I feel good knowing that I respected them before anyone knew who they were.