It's a fair point. I think making an exact copy of a cue made by a living, active cue maker would be a bit of a problem... But making a copy of a cue made by a deceased cue maker, especially if owned by a famous player is another thing. I also believe that many of these "tributes" or "copies" may in fact be technically better cues, with better hit/playability, due to better materials and perhaps the current cue maker being (gasp) actually more skilled than the old master he's copying. I mean, why take a 100 year old house cue and convert it, when you can have a cue maker build one from scratch, with the same colored veneers, same basic construction technique, but with better select woods and more durable modern epoxies, more precise inlay work, etc.? Don't get me wrong, Titlist conversions are wonderful things...but what's wrong with a maker building a copy of a Rambow 26 1/2 trophy cue from scratch? Rambow's not making them today, nor is George, nor is Gus. Someday, someone will commission a copy of a specific Tascarella or a specific Hercek.
Gibson and Fender are selling exact copies of famous custom guitars they made that Hendrix, SRV, Clapton, BB King, etc. had or still have. No one is trying to pass off an SRV "Lenny" model Strat as the genuine article, they just want to own/play one that looks the same...right down to factory created wear patterns to mimic the condition of the original. Other companies have made nearly exact copies of Stratocasters and Flying Vs. This happens in most custom made articles. I see no reason a player or collector that admires the Balabushka Willie Mosconi played with can't commission a copy made by a highly skilled cue maker. It pays tribute to the old master and is a credit to the skill of the modern builder...and the taste of the customer.
Gibson and Fender are selling exact copies of famous custom guitars they made that Hendrix, SRV, Clapton, BB King, etc. had or still have. No one is trying to pass off an SRV "Lenny" model Strat as the genuine article, they just want to own/play one that looks the same...right down to factory created wear patterns to mimic the condition of the original. Other companies have made nearly exact copies of Stratocasters and Flying Vs. This happens in most custom made articles. I see no reason a player or collector that admires the Balabushka Willie Mosconi played with can't commission a copy made by a highly skilled cue maker. It pays tribute to the old master and is a credit to the skill of the modern builder...and the taste of the customer.
