Has anyone tried out the new cue holders made by Ellen Van Buren? Basically, they are a piece of that grippy material we used to use on the shelves of our RV so things wouldn't slide around.
I passed by some at the dollar store and one was a really pretty salmon color so I bought it to try out. I cut off a piece and stuffed it into my already full case pocket. I brought it out and tried it first on a round table and it worked dandy! I just draped it over the side.
One side seemed grippier than the other, so I put that on the table side so it wouldn't slide around. Of course, if someone were to run into your cues, they would fall over, but for holding them upright, it's just fine, doesn't take up any room and is very low tech (as opposed to my other one that folds into a little puzzle, but holds 2 jump cues off the floor).
Ellen's version is prettier, with a band of logoed ribbon across the top, but I can't remember what she calls them. I saw her original one in Seattle but no one told me where to find them. Anyway, it is a nice, cheap, lighter alternative to everything else.
I passed by some at the dollar store and one was a really pretty salmon color so I bought it to try out. I cut off a piece and stuffed it into my already full case pocket. I brought it out and tried it first on a round table and it worked dandy! I just draped it over the side.
One side seemed grippier than the other, so I put that on the table side so it wouldn't slide around. Of course, if someone were to run into your cues, they would fall over, but for holding them upright, it's just fine, doesn't take up any room and is very low tech (as opposed to my other one that folds into a little puzzle, but holds 2 jump cues off the floor).
Ellen's version is prettier, with a band of logoed ribbon across the top, but I can't remember what she calls them. I saw her original one in Seattle but no one told me where to find them. Anyway, it is a nice, cheap, lighter alternative to everything else.