OK who built this one??
This is one SWEET looking cue up close. Figure 98 from page 329 of the Billiard Encyclopedia shows this (nearly ) exact cue built by George Balabushka himself.
The other pics speak for themselves. The ebony is very rich with figure while the veneers are the subtle dull shades of WW II era from the early Hoppe cues (I believe we used to import the dyes from Germany, but we had an embargo due to the War) . The pigskin leather wrap is nearly seamless. When you tighten down the shafts the last turn is snug and makes for fantastic feedback.
This cue has been saved and reborn to play again rather than sitting in a collector's case hidden from our sights.
The craftsmanship is AWESOME.
Thank you,
John
This is one SWEET looking cue up close. Figure 98 from page 329 of the Billiard Encyclopedia shows this (nearly ) exact cue built by George Balabushka himself.
The other pics speak for themselves. The ebony is very rich with figure while the veneers are the subtle dull shades of WW II era from the early Hoppe cues (I believe we used to import the dyes from Germany, but we had an embargo due to the War) . The pigskin leather wrap is nearly seamless. When you tighten down the shafts the last turn is snug and makes for fantastic feedback.
This cue has been saved and reborn to play again rather than sitting in a collector's case hidden from our sights.
The craftsmanship is AWESOME.
Thank you,
John








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