Originally Posted by Big Splash!
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Antique Ivory Billiard Balls once used by Tom Reece in world record break
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Originally Posted by ADR147 View PostWell the balls I have are not because of the materials. I think the same would be true for every collector of snooker / billiards I know.Last edited by Big Splash!; 13 September 2016, 08:01 PM.
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well the ivory is worth a price per gram in china I personally would pay more than that price for these items.
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Originally Posted by Stevie Wonder View PostWas reading a thread here yesterday wherein they were talking about rare woods. Mike Wooldridge stepped in and said chop em all down. Wonder what he'd say about elephants? I know one guy who'd like to see them all shot though. The guy being the kid in the rolo advert remember it?Last edited by Big Splash!; 14 September 2016, 12:01 PM.
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Originally Posted by ADR147 View Postwell the ivory is worth a price per gram in china I personally would pay more than that price for these items.
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Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostWhen we in the West make it ok to collect ivory, we give the nod to Asia to do the same, only with today's elephants and rhinos. These animals are being hunted down for no good reason.
Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostBut hey, it's ok for the West to trade in ivory. Let's just not allow others to do so. Profit should not be made from misery.
Originally Posted by Big Splash! View PostThat you would want something from a magnificent animal cruely and painfully killed says much about you Deano.
As to them being ivory, shame and I do think about the activities that happened across the years in the past, NOT just ivory hunting but across many subjects; BUT there is absolutely F*** ALL I can do about something that happened and stopped a hundred plus years ago.
Of course illegal poaching happens, not just elephants/rhinos/etc. and as a family we do our small bit to support those that try to stop these activities for good.
But to blanket stain all old items of beauty/history because of how the material was sourced, that is too simplistic and wont do any good.
Just because something from the past is now repugnant to us nowadays does not mean you close your eyes to it, for what it is, by destroying it; the Nazis (among others) tried this by book burning anything they - in their infinite wisdom - disagreed with (scared of the truth more like).
We must learn from the past, the nice along with the ugly.
Anyway, all have a nice day.Up the TSF! :snooker:
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Originally Posted by DeanH View PostTotally agree with your comments.
Everyone can trade in OLD ivory, not just the West. It is the new (post-1920s something I think) that is banned.
I hope so, a massive snooker fan that would love to own these historic items.
As to them being ivory, shame and I do think about the activities that happened across the years in the past, NOT just ivory hunting but across many subjects; BUT there is absolutely F*** ALL I can do about something that happened and stopped a hundred plus years ago.
Of course illegal poaching happens, not just elephants/rhinos/etc. and as a family we do our small bit to support those that try to stop these activities for good.
But to blanket stain all old items of beauty/history because of how the material was sourced, that is too simplistic and wont do any good.
Just because something from the past is now repugnant to us nowadays does not mean you close your eyes to it, for what it is, by destroying it; the Nazis (among others) tried this by book burning anything they - in their infinite wisdom - disagreed with (scared of the truth more like).
We must learn from the past, the nice along with the ugly.
Anyway, all have a nice day.
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Originally Posted by DeanH View PostAs I understand it, any old ivory can not be reworked, it must remain as it is from before 1920s (?).
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Sorry, maybe I did go too far
I meant if it is a carving it must stay that carving, if a ball it must stay a ball
I may have it wrong but that is the way I understand it. I suppose you can have a special licence to rework old ivory, like the special licences to buy/sell old ivory (auction houses, etc.) :shrug-shoulders:Up the TSF! :snooker:
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Originally Posted by DeanH View PostEarlier did you not say "burn all ivory" if we did that then the museums would not have anything to show and inform the generations of young.
No simple, black/white answer, as with most things in life I'm afraid.
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sorry but museums are often the biggest buyers on the private market as well as the auctions (not just talking ivory either ) and some are big as sellers as well, often buying for investment and selling for profit to keep their organisations running
and yes they do lend to each other, of courseUp the TSF! :snooker:
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It is legal to buy and sell pre 1947 ivory, there is a cue making website in the US that does so, but cannot now sell it overseas or to Florida as that state has recently changed the law. So in the US in all states bar Florida you can buy and sell pre 1947 ivory, though proving it's age isn't easy, hence the change in the law. I believe that most of the illegal stuff there comes from walrus tusks.
Those billiard balls, if genuine, can be worth an awful lot to the right person, Roger Lee maybe.
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