Duc,
Almost no cue builder will use the shaft with the two big black lines in them. Will it play good. It might. Is the playability the only thing we look for. In truth the answer is NO! What some look for is mostly just great looks that will still play okay. Others look for something that will play great and still looks okay. Others will settle for nothing less than something that will play great and looks great. Those shafts are far and few between and very few cuemakers achieve that goal. Now when I say "plays great" that does not mean there might not be a better playing shaft out there. It has already been pointed out that some of the better playing qualities in wood might be uglier in a shaft. But the market needs re-educated to not think snow white is right. Some people only care about playability. But if that was the case with everyone then we would not be building inlaid cues. There would be no slot rings, or insistance on even points if people did not care about beauty.
So with that said, the public need re-educated about hardness, stiffness, color and tone of wood, but the market as a whole will not accept big black lines in shafts no matter what. So the harder darker colored wood that has been air dried for a while and then kiln dried the slower ways with a sugar line or two in them should become the norm. It might not be as pristine as some are used to, but if it plays good and is not ugly then it will not take away from the beauty of the butt. So nothing fell on deaf ears here, but the market will accept what the market will accept. The market needs to accept darker, harder shaft that are not perfectly clean. But we can never expect them to accept big black lines in our shafts, until we quit putting inlays, points, butterflies and any other decorations in our cues.
Bottom line is cuemakers want to build great playing cues, but they also want to sell cues. So we have to find the happy medium that the market will buy. Cues are still an artistic expression as well as a sports instrument. A really ugly shaft will take away from a beautiful cue.
Almost no cue builder will use the shaft with the two big black lines in them. Will it play good. It might. Is the playability the only thing we look for. In truth the answer is NO! What some look for is mostly just great looks that will still play okay. Others look for something that will play great and still looks okay. Others will settle for nothing less than something that will play great and looks great. Those shafts are far and few between and very few cuemakers achieve that goal. Now when I say "plays great" that does not mean there might not be a better playing shaft out there. It has already been pointed out that some of the better playing qualities in wood might be uglier in a shaft. But the market needs re-educated to not think snow white is right. Some people only care about playability. But if that was the case with everyone then we would not be building inlaid cues. There would be no slot rings, or insistance on even points if people did not care about beauty.
So with that said, the public need re-educated about hardness, stiffness, color and tone of wood, but the market as a whole will not accept big black lines in shafts no matter what. So the harder darker colored wood that has been air dried for a while and then kiln dried the slower ways with a sugar line or two in them should become the norm. It might not be as pristine as some are used to, but if it plays good and is not ugly then it will not take away from the beauty of the butt. So nothing fell on deaf ears here, but the market will accept what the market will accept. The market needs to accept darker, harder shaft that are not perfectly clean. But we can never expect them to accept big black lines in our shafts, until we quit putting inlays, points, butterflies and any other decorations in our cues.
Bottom line is cuemakers want to build great playing cues, but they also want to sell cues. So we have to find the happy medium that the market will buy. Cues are still an artistic expression as well as a sports instrument. A really ugly shaft will take away from a beautiful cue.
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