I really like the Blue Book of Cues. However I am finding I need more info. Let me just start with the joint. Pointed brass pin with SS general era, brass pin with SS. Ect..
Which maker?
What cue?
Your questions are a bit broad and the answers more complex than I think you might be aware.
.
I really like the Blue Book of Cues. However I am finding I need more info. Let me just start with the joint. Pointed brass pin with SS general era, brass pin with SS. Ect..
Don't know if you serious or not but i would disagree based on one reason: scarcity(or lack thereof). One of the main tenets of collecting is an item's rarity/scarcity. Lucasi does make GREAT cues but they've also made them by the boatload. I used to buy/sell/trade Ping Anser Scottsdale putters. They were/are collectible for one reason: there aren't very many of them. Do they putt any better than standard Phoenix-stamped model? No. The rarity is the collectible factor. Cues are no different.Put your money into a collection of Lucasi cues and thank me in 10 years.
Just ask Cuesblues.
Don't know if you serious or not but i would disagree based on one reason: scarcity(or lack thereof). One of the main tenets of collecting is an item's rarity/scarcity. Lucasi does make GREAT cues but they've also made them by the boatload. I used to buy/sell/trade Ping Anser Scottsdale putters. They were/are collectible for one reason: there aren't very many of them. Do they putt any better than standard Phoenix-stamped model? No. The rarity is the collectible factor. Cues are no different.
That would have to be the only reason to buy something they've made about a billion of.I think he just meant that he would end up liking how they all played lol
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
70's
"Pointed" points to Adam.
FYI, the book values are pretty much there for decoration.
And, a lot of people turn and run at the first sight of "level" blah, blah, blah.
The Blue Book is good for a few things, like logos, and some real basic info on
cuemakers, but from a technical standpoint it's pretty worthless.
The values are out of whack, some of them were taken from the first BB, and guys
could put in whatever they wanted to regardless of what the cues actually sell for.
The level system based on the number of points and inlays is lame and makes no sense.
I'm sure that any specific questions you have would be answered correctly in the
main forum, there are quite a few knowledgeable collectors here, but it's hard to
answer general questions based on the joint & pin material.
I will say that I haven't seen too many high end cues with a stainless steel joint and a brass pin.
If you want to invest, speak with a reputable financial advisor. If you want to collect, get the cues that strike a nerve with you. Either you like the design, history, backstory, colors, etc. If it sparks emotion, buy it. Don't worry what it's worth or what it may be worth in the future. People too often conflate investing and collecting. IMO, they should be kept separate. If you consider your collection an investment, then you may as well sell everything you have & buy a bunch of lottery tickets.
I have a very, very early Thomas Wayne cue in my collection. Regardless of value, it's never leaving my possession. It sparks emotion in me on multiple levels. For me alone it's fascinating, inspiring, vengeful, comical, and historical all in the same. It means something to me. And that's why it's a collectible, not an investment. I don't expect anybody to understand nor do I care. It's my collection, not theirs.
My thoughts exactly.
What is collectible or exciting to one person might be boring to another. When collecting (anything) becomes driven by value alone, you are probably getting into dangerous territory.
I wasn't suggesting it's for sure an Adam.Points to Adam?
Be careful with that.
I have a number of cues with pointed pins that are not Adam.
For example I have a 1967 Viking Titlist conversion with pointed brass pin and stainless collar.
There are many other examples.
.