Thanks, but not quite what I mean. Usually the wood inlays are a different species than the forearm. The exact same species with teh same grain seems odd since you could just stain that portion of the forearm and skip the inlay (except for the ebony outline).It's all for visual effect. The dark stained parts (points) are to look like a true spliced cue.
Is that not exactly what they did? Cut a pocket for the ebony point, stain the part below the pocket and insert ebony into the pocket. That is exactly what you described as near as i can tell.Thanks, but not quite what I mean. Usually the wood inlays are a different species than the forearm. The exact same species with teh same grain seems odd since you could just stain that portion of the forearm and skip the inlay (except for the ebony outline).
Some people have the crazy notion that BEM has beautiful figure.What is the point (no pun intended) of inlaying Birdseye maple into Birdseye maple?
Cannot answer your question, but I agree about the different grain and figure on many examples of the STL-3.Even though both parts of the butt are bird's eye maple, to my eye, the grains don't match up on either side of the ebony. Would this indicate a splice or are the stained points inlayed with the ebony?
Well, there is definitely no splice.Even though both parts of the butt are bird's eye maple, to my eye, the grains don't match up on either side of the ebony. Would this indicate a splice or are the stained points inlayed with the ebony?