Worminator said:You tell me...Gina...or Phillippi?
i210mfu said:Well this is clear...Both are Phillippi with a copy of old Gina designs...
MF
Worminator said:You tell me...Gina...or Phillippi?
Donald A. Purdy said:Ya know what's funny, they both are like the PFD at the top of the page. So, who coppied who here and what is your point?
Purdman
Sheldon said:As long as the cues are not passed off as something they are not, I see nothing wrong.
Sheldon said:As long as the cues are not passed off as something they are not, I see nothing wrong.
Worminator said:You tell me...Gina...or Phillippi?
JimBo said:So tell us all now, who made these Ginacues???
Jim
Worminator said:First of all, they are not my cues and sorry for the bad pics. Secondly, they are Phillippi's. I think these cues exemplify the point (made by some) of the other thread.
I usually stay out of these things, but mixing butterfly points and v-groove points is a couple of hundred years old. Yes, Ernie made it popular again on high end cues, but you will find it on lower end Adams and other imported cues from the 70's and 80's. So Ernie was not doing anything new here. How many are now complaining about the majority of cuemakers now using shorter joint rings. That is something South West made popular, though they were not the first to do it. Similar designs will always show up. Exact copies of complex designs seems wrong to me, but these are just simple v-points over the top of butterfly points. Very primitive design even though it looks very sharp.i210mfu said:Purdmann,
well I don't know who copied from whom but what I know is that back in 1992 at a very large cue show here in Germany on our stand we had about 15 Gina's and the black design shown in the pictures was among them. If you look into another thread here (Chao World Chamoionship Cue) you can see that Gina used the rainbow scheme a lot. I don't have a point here, but the cues pictured are no Gina's. To me the origin of the "rainbow scheme" is from Ernie Gutierrez. Most of the cuemakers copy a little here and there along their way to stardom..
Markus
cueman said:I usually stay out of these things, but mixing butterfly points and v-groove points is a couple of hundred years old. Yes, Ernie made it popular again on high end cues, but you will find it on lower end Adams and other imported cues from the 70's and 80's. So Ernie was not doing anything new here. How many are now complaining about the majority of cuemakers now using shorter joint rings. That is something South West made popular, though they were not the first to do it. Similar designs will always show up. Exact copies of complex designs seems wrong to me, but these are just simple v-points over the top of butterfly points. Very primitive design even though it looks very sharp.
JimBo said:Chris I can't believe you jumped in and posted this. Your first line was right on target you should have stayed out like normal. I just lost all respect for you, if you really believe that this cue is just butterfly and V groove points. Did you even look at the pics posted at the start of the thread? Are you serious??? I am shaking my head in disbelief. Can you with a serious face look at the 2 phillippi cues in the first post of this thread and tell me that they are not knockoffs of a Ginacue design??? I am really disappointed and shocked. The fact that you can't even look at a cue and tell it's well thought out design that involves balance, color, size, and placement is amazing, and even if we say that the 30th anniversary cue is "just" butterfly and V groove points what about the other cue? Was that something that has been around since 1912?? I almost feel like Ashton Kuocher (?) is going to pop out any minute now and tell me I'm being punked.
Jim
classiccues said:Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy...
These are not cue theft.. they are far from whole cue rip offs (your words pal). Thats what you said you were fighting, right? Whole cue copies, remember. Guess what.. these don't qualify. Sorry Jim, can't have it both ways. All they are, are Gina inspired. The Gina cues have alot of silver in them, these cues do not. Sorry Jim, as much as you would like to keep trying to redefine theft, you can't. You cannot say whole cue rip off and change it just because its one of your heros. And because you find the similarities disturbing. Get a life Jim. Also try and be more consistent with your accusations.
Joe (---trade winds they are a blowin'... Jimbo's sails about to shift and change his goin's...![]()
buddha162 said:I have no solid opinion regarding design theft, the definition of and whether it applies here.
But there's little doubt that the cues are at least Gina inspired, and I think it's amazing that the same overall design can yield such different results. The Philipi "copies" are incredibly ugly imo, especially the second one. I wouldn't be caught dead with that cue, it's garish and awkward, whereas the original Gina is perfect.
-Roger