Let me try to help you understand.
First you need to know Tony, builder of Black Boar cues. If you have never talked with him I would highly suggest you make an appt to sit down and buy him a beer. Knifing in points has been a terminology he has used for years. Basically doing "recuts" for those not in the know. What is a recut you ask? A recut veneer is a single piece of wood that is glued into a point pocket in the forearm during the build and then using the exact same setup used to cut the point pocket the additional piece of wood that was just added is cut in the same procedure as the point pocket originally was.... just not as deep, leaving a thin line of what ever added wood was additionally glued in the original pocket. A recut veneer. There you have it, clear as mud. Example A... outside maple veneer...028 thick... next, tulipwood...080...next ebony...030 thick....next is the tulipwood point. Each piece individually glued in place and then "recut" just not as deep, to allow what you see in the picture.
View attachment 634705
OR IS IT ALWAYS DONE THAT WAY?
Years ago someone came up with a different idea to give a better option of quality control on each veneer and allow the builder to do "one (1) glue up" on a forearm utilizing as many different seamless veneers at the point as one would like in each point pocket. By cutting each .030 thick veneer first from a single piece of wood it allows one to cut pockets in the forearm one time and do the glue up in one setting. A few examples...
View attachment 634714
View attachment 634715
View attachment 634716
View attachment 634721
HOW IS THIS POSSIBLE YOU ASK?
View attachment 634726
View attachment 634727
.030 THICK INDIVDUAL VENEER PIECES CUT OUTSIDE THE CUE FIRST. THAT'S HOW!
Same end result to get to a "recut look"....2 different paths taken.
I have no idea why the bold button is stuck in the on position and can not be turned off. 