production or not

AuntyDan said:
Exactly. "Custom" is widely accepted in the industry but simply the wrong word, widely open to misinterpretation and arguments just like this. Not only that but the word is widely abused outside the industry too. (I used to drive a 1990 Buick LeSabre "Custom"!)

The correct word IMHO is "Artisan". In my definition an "Artisan" cue would be defined by the following properties:
1) Be made by an individual or a very small group of people under direct supervision of an identifiable individual.
2) Be made of high quality materials.
3) Be made using high quality construction and assembly methods. (Whether these are manual, semi manual or automated is not relevant, only the quality/skill of how the methods are used.)

By simple logic cues made that meet these 3 factors can never be very high volume, although with use of CNC machinery it is possible to get close, especially if one of these elements is compromised. (E.G. Dale Perry)

Anything that does not meet this criteria is a Production cue.

On top of this various other factors would enhance to the Artisan quality of a cue, but are not required as long as 1-3 are present.
4) Be of a very original design
5) Be of a very original construction
6) Be made from rare, difficult to use or non-standard materials
7) Be capable of high levels of customization to meet an individual customer's needs
8) Be generally considered to be a classic example of design and/or construction

Now that we have this agreed I will PM AZMike a simple SQL routine that will find and replace all instances of "Custom" on the board with "Artisan" and then we can finally move on.


WHEW! what a relief! now we can all put this to rest and go to bed because the great OZ... er..um..oops i mean "Artisan" has spoken. ;) :D
 
AuntyDan said:
The correct word IMHO is "Artisan". In my definition an "Artisan" cue would be defined by the following properties:
1) Be made by an individual or a very small group of people under direct supervision of an identifiable individual.
2) Be made of high quality materials.
3) Be made using high quality construction and assembly methods. (Whether these are manual, semi manual or automated is not relevant, only the quality/skill of how the methods are used.)

I agree 100%! I think that's the right word!! Perhaps we can start a petition or something.
 
I totally agree that a cue which meets 1-3 is an Artisan cue but...

If i, without proper cue building skills, made a cue on my own using high quality materials, is it a production cue? :)

you might say it's just a crap and nothing like cue.
 
skins said:
no disrespect but it may be semantics iyo but imo you thoughts are flawed as far as what makes a custom cue "custom". if that's the way you determine for yourself that's fine but me and many other maker/collectors think differently. though the word custom may literally mean what you're describing, the meaning as far as production vs. custom cue makers has other factors such as, how much the "namesake" participates in the process of the cues being made. to me, the fact that a "custom" maker controls, hands on, the process from start to finish is what make their cues custom. having your own playing specs is what makes it customer specific. that's how i separate the two.

Skins, you're addressing the questions I had.
There are certain cues that in my interpretation
would be considered custom cues because of the name.
And it certainly does matter when you go to sell
or trade that cue.
Great imput from everybody. Thanks.
 
AuntyDan said:
Exactly. "Custom" is widely accepted in the industry but simply the wrong word, widely open to misinterpretation and arguments just like this. Not only that but the word is widely abused outside the industry too. (I used to drive a 1990 Buick LeSabre "Custom"!)
Correct. I think the history of the word simply comes from the idea that when individuals started making changes, modifications, or entire new creations, they were at that time very custom. So, "custom" has come to mean, "a departure from the normal off-the-shelf item." For cues, at one point, that must have been a comparison only to the mass-produced single-piece cues.


The correct word IMHO is "Artisan". In my definition an "Artisan" cue would be defined by the following properties:
1) Be made by an individual or a very small group of people under direct supervision of an identifiable individual.
2) Be made of high quality materials.
3) Be made using high quality construction and assembly methods. (Whether these are manual, semi manual or automated is not relevant, only the quality/skill of how the methods are used.)
I'm not sure I'm ready to embrace the term, but it's so far the best I've seen on this subject. And it is accepted in other craftsman and culinary industries. So, I'll start by shaking hands with it.

Should we also include "not mass-produced" in the list above? Or is artisanal by definition the opposite of mass-produced?


Fred <~~~ thinks history has just been made
 
cuenut said:
According to this, a Bender, Southwest, McWorter, Tad, virtually any plain Hoppe style 4 pointer, etc. would all be considered production cues?

Cornerman, your guess is as good as anyones' out there. You can define custom by any means you wish. I really don't think it makes a difference what you call them, but others' perceptions of them do make a difference in the secondary market.

Southwest cues is the perfect example. Probably 95% are made virtually the same (satin model or a 6 pointer with or without the rings), but the marketabiliyt is high because of the playability, regardless of how many out there might be identical to the one you may have. Schons are production in my opinion, but have relatively decent resale value as others that are typically considered production (Meucci, McDermott, Joss, Viking, Pechauer). But they are great playing cues.

When I post cues for sale/trade, and stated that I don't want any trade offers for production cues, most people understand who the major production cue companies are. Another thing that I would consider is whether they consider themselves a "company" or a cuemaker.

I would think that if you called them, the following would consider themselves companies. You may wish to add to the list.

Meucci, Joss, McDermott, Viking, Pechauer, Lucasi, Players, Huebler, Jackson, Schmelke, maybe Schon. I'm sure there are others.

But can't you get a custom-made Jackson or even a custom-made
Pechauer?
Doesn't Jacoby make a production cue and also made to order cues?
Also, going in a different direction: Are all Ginacues different? What
about Hercek and Searing? I'm not talking about deliberate twin cues,
of course.
 
This could get muddy. I agree with the Artisan term but there needs to be more terms than just "artisan" and "production." I do not feel like I am an artisan but I am definately not a production cue. I have a line that meets all the the "criteria" and I also make several customs throughout the year. I am the only one that touches my cues. What am I? (that leaves me open doesn't it)
 
hondo said:
But can't you get a custom-made Jackson or even a custom-made
Pechauer?
Doesn't Jacoby make a production cue and also made to order cues?
Also, going in a different direction: Are all Ginacues different? What
about Hercek and Searing? I'm not talking about deliberate twin cues,
of course.

Yes you can get a true custom from almost all of the "companies" out there, including McDermott and Huebler. And when you go to resell such a cue, they typically demand more $$$ because of it, and most of the time, the seller will state that it is a "XYZ Company custom" or "one of a kind" (not to be confused with a DP, of course).

From what I have seen, most Ginacues I have seen have many duplicates out there in terms of design. The Hoppe style cues are almost always duplicative as well. I would think that once you start getting cues with inlays, the Herceks and Searings will tend to be very low in duplicity of design.

I was simply pointing out that the cuemakers that would consider themselves a "company" rather than a cuemaker are normally the ones most people think of when you say "production cue".
 
ratcues said:
This could get muddy. I agree with the Artisan term but there needs to be more terms than just "artisan" and "production." I do not feel like I am an artisan but I am definately not a production cue. I have a line that meets all the the "criteria" and I also make several customs throughout the year. I am the only one that touches my cues. What am I? (that leaves me open doesn't it)
Like you said you make several customs throughout the year,the other cues would be a series,if you would like to say they are production,cues made over and over again to no ones particular design or specs.Alot of guys do what you do,Pechauer,Kikel,and DP,but there are cuemakers out there who make nothing but custom cues and have no series or production type cues besides i believe SPs.
 
ratcues said:
This could get muddy. I agree with the Artisan term but there needs to be more terms than just "artisan" and "production." I do not feel like I am an artisan but I am definately not a production cue. I have a line that meets all the the "criteria" and I also make several customs throughout the year. I am the only one that touches my cues. What am I? (that leaves me open doesn't it)

Well, Rat ole buddy, you're definitely more than
a mouse but not exactly a cat.
 
In terms of the cue biz:

Production - any company churning out lots of models of the same design and specs.

Custom - any shop that does one offs in design and spec.

In my mind:

Custom is customer specificed. The customer gives the parameters and the builder makes it according to those specs.

Cues that are one offs but built without a customer's specs are not custom. But they are also not neccesarily production. They are art pieces made to sell to the first person who wants to and can buy them.

You don't call a painting a custom painting that was done without a customer for it so why call a cue without a customer a custom cue?

Small shop that do cues in a line are doing production run cues. This does not mean that the cues are better or worse than any "customer specified" cue that has been built.

For resale value - there really isn't much in most cues whether they are called "custom" or not unless the cue has an established name. Even at that it must have the kind of name that collectors are truly drawn to because a $2000 Tim Scruggs isn't worth $500 in Missouri where they have never heard of Scruggs before. Southwest is about the only cue that consistently sells for more than retail in my experience. And even those are often sold for far less than they are "worth" by Southwest owners who aren't really too keen on what Southwests are going for these days.
 
ratcues said:
This could get muddy. I agree with the Artisan term but there needs to be more terms than just "artisan" and "production." I do not feel like I am an artisan but I am definately not a production cue. I have a line that meets all the the "criteria" and I also make several customs throughout the year. I am the only one that touches my cues. What am I? (that leaves me open doesn't it)

If the Rat Cues are made each to the same specs in batches with no customer in mind then they are production cues whether there is only one person doing the producing or not. There is a street painter in Las Vegas who does airbush pieces using stencils. Very talented fellow. He "produces" hundreds of paintings a week. His technique is so refined that he can create a stunning piece in a matter of minutes. He has a repertoire of motifs that he does aver and over giving the slightest embellishment here and there. This guy is a "production" artist in my mind. He makes pieces with no customer for it but the pieces aren't introspective works of art either, they are easily reproduced designs that he has worked on to be able to do them quickly.

You are a one man production shop if you are turning out the same or similar cues with no customer in mind. If each cue were different in at least design then you would be an artist the way say a Mike Bender is an artist.
 
Roadie said:
Even at that it must have the kind of name that collectors are truly drawn to because a $2000 Tim Scruggs isn't worth $500 in Missouri where they have never heard of Scruggs before.

Hey now, I live in Missouri and I've heard of Tim Scruggs and so have a lot of my friends. I have a friend who has played with a Tim Scruggs sneaky since before I even thought about getting interested in cues. I'll take all the $2000 TS's you will sell me for $500 each!
 
I don't know......the term "production" has such a stigma attached to it and as a one man shop, I wouldn't want to have that label attached to me and my cues.

I would consider an "artisan cuemaker" as someone that does one of a kinds. Stroud, Thomas Wayne, Bender, Black, Hercek, and so on.

I would consider myself a "custom cue maker", since I do both, but my line is still in small quantities.

Production, IMO, is the mass quantities such as McDermott, Meucci, Vking, etc.

I know a lot of custom cuemakers in the ACA. They have a series or line and make customs more detail and inlays than I could ever do. If you called them "production" I think you'd get punched in the nose.
 
You are a one man production shop if you are turning out the same or similar cues with no customer in mind. If each cue were different in at least design then you would be an artist the way say a Mike Bender is an artist.[/QUOTE]

By your own quote, Bender would be a one man production shop except for the few really one offs he puts out. All you have to do is look at the stuff he sends INDYQ to know that he turns out the same or similar cues with no specific customer in mind.
 
ratcues said:
I know a lot of custom cuemakers in the ACA. They have a series or line and make customs more detail and inlays than I could ever do. If you called them "production" I think you'd get punched in the nose.

hey now that's a little harsh don't you think? maybe a nice swift kick in the shin, under the table might suffice. :D
 
skins said:
hey now that's a little harsh don't you think? maybe a nice swift kick in the shin, under the table might suffice. :D

Probably so but cuemakers are a touchy group. They take a lot of pride in what they build and to have a label attached, right or wrong, if it offends them, look out!
 
Jacoby

hondo said:
I'm talking about buying used.
I bought a Mottey and a Scruggs on ebay
that were obviously made for somebody.
They were unique.
I bought a Jacoby custom that while nice
was obviously one of many.
I've seen several Josey fancy sp's &
Harris plain janes that look alike.
I've got 2 Jacksons. One's unique and
the other looks production.
What about my Bender that I bought used
or my Kikel that I bought new from a dealer?
Are there others just like those and if so are
they custom or production?
It's very confusing.
Is one of those that can and does both very well! they will like Samsara construct a custom cue to your specs! while they also have a line or two that is more on a short production mode!
 
Custom?

Cornerman said:
They are all production. They are produced. Some are mass producers. Some are low volume fabricators.

Custom is not the opposite of production. Never has been, never will be. I don't know when people started making the presumption that they are opposites.

A custom cuemaker doesn't always have to make a customer-specific cue. A mass producer can make a custom mass-production.


That's my input into this. The confusion happens because the terms are incorrectly used to begin with.

Fred <~~~ works for a custom mass producer

I'm with Fred on this one. I've got a Jacoby cue that is 1 of 1 (made just for me) and is unlike anything else I have ever seen from them. Many would consider Jacoby to not be a "custom" cue maker, but they can be. Most "custom" cue makers had, at one time or another, a catalog of standard styles. People like Scruggs and Black. I've got a Black cue that is a design right out of what was his catalog at the time. I'm sure he made many of these identical cues over the years, probably more than 100. So is this cue custom or production? Even McDermott will make you a 1 of 1 if you hound them long enough. Like I said, I'm with Fred on this one. This question can't be answered.

Andy
 
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