Sheldon said:If the points and buttsleeve are a very dark color, or ebony the points can be made sharp very easily.
Is the butt nice and straight? What kind of wrap would you want put back on it? I can do something like this for around $300.
matthew staton said:The cue would have too be turned down, would it??? I think it would make the cue kinda skinny what do you think.I don't no just my 2cents. I would not do it..
cuesmith said:Well, not necessarily, as Sheldon asked the poster about the straightness of the cue. If it's good and straight, you can just turn the inlays and lightly sand them in to match. It is much trickier than doing it from scratch when building a cue though.
This kind of brought up a discussion I had yesterday with a good buddy of mine. He'd paid, what we both consider a premium price, for a Plain Jane Richard Harris birdseye cue. Close to $900. Recently he had another cuemaker, whom I might add does great work, add some inlays to the cue. I told him I thought it was a bad idea, from a collectors standpoint. I'm sure the cue looks great, but, I'm not sure if it would hurt the value or not. What do you guys here think.
just more hot air!
Sherm
Hurt the value? Yescuesmith said:...He'd paid, what we both consider a premium price, for a Plain Jane Richard Harris birdseye cue. Close to $900. Recently he had another cuemaker, whom I might add does great work, add some inlays to the cue. I told him I thought it was a bad idea, from a collectors standpoint. I'm sure the cue looks great, but, I'm not sure if it would hurt the value or not. What do you guys here think.
cuesmith said:Well, not necessarily, as Sheldon asked the poster about the straightness of the cue. If it's good and straight, you can just turn the inlays and lightly sand them in to match. It is much trickier than doing it from scratch when building a cue though.
This kind of brought up a discussion I had yesterday with a good buddy of mine. He'd paid, what we both consider a premium price, for a Plain Jane Richard Harris birdseye cue. Close to $900. Recently he had another cuemaker, whom I might add does great work, add some inlays to the cue. I told him I thought it was a bad idea, from a collectors standpoint. I'm sure the cue looks great, but, I'm not sure if it would hurt the value or not. What do you guys here think.
just more hot air!
Sherm
Michael Webb said:I agree, I consider it disrespectful to alter the appearance of someone else's work.