It looks dark enough to be ebony to me. Could it be the picture that darkens it a bit?Yes, wood screw.
In hand, it looks like rosewood to me.
* Definitely Brazilian Rosewood.
It looks dark enough to be ebony to me. Could it be the picture that darkens it a bit?Yes, wood screw.
In hand, it looks like rosewood to me.
* Definitely Brazilian Rosewood.
Wha????I have more than just Adam cue catalog files. I have hundreds of pictures in my files (thousands actually).
And I have more than just Adam cues with pointed pins, both in my picture files and in my collection.
1960's Mali cues had pointed pins for example.
I originally felt there was a strong chance this is a Rich cue actually. The problem is the darn logo.
This is a Rich cue. I own it.
View attachment 857620
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It can be very difficult to differentiate some Adam cues from the better Kao cues. But look at that squared off brass pilot.
That pilot is much more like a Kao cue.
But, I am unfamiliar with pointed pin Kao cues.
Could be Adam.
Could be Rich.
Could be Rich made by Adam.
I thought so too. But it has a grain that is not ebony when I pull it up on the high resolution monitor.It looks dark enough to be ebony to me. Could it be the picture that darkens it a bit?
Ebony sometimes has a grain, can be lighter than dark ebony. I'm not sure about this one though, I'd have to hold it to be sure.I thought so too. But it has a grain that is not ebony when I pull it up on the high resolution monitor.
Yes, it photos dark. I believe it’s B. Rosewood.It looks dark enough to be ebony to me. Could it be the picture that darkens it a bit?
They made more than that.Had no idea they made that many models.
Good pic of the wood.
Yes. There are more than enough varieties of ebony to make that very true.Ebony sometimes has a grain, can be lighter than dark ebony. I'm not sure about this one though, I'd have to hold it to be sure.
Could you explain what this means?Edit: I just looked closer, those look like butted veneers, not mitered. All the Kao cues I have are mitered.
Could you explain what this means?
Could be an Asian/striped Ebony, or a very dark piece of East Indian Rosewood.
Could you explain what this means?
Most people will prefer the mitered, but we have seen some better makers use butted veneers, We saw an early Richard Black with butted veneers recently.