User:SMcCandlish/Gallery
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Contents |
[edit] Welcome to my gallery page
Images I have created (or significantly modified) and uploaded to commons.
[edit] Cue sports
Racking up a game of cribbage pool, with the 15 ball in the middle, no two corner balls adding up to 15, and the apex ball on the foot spot. (Closeup.) |
Racking up a game of cribbage pool, with the 15 ball in the middle, no two corner balls adding up to 15, and the apex ball on the foot spot. (Wide version.) |
Racking up a game of cribbage pool, with the 15 ball in the middle, no two corner balls adding up to 15, and the apex ball on the foot spot. (Cropped version.) |
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Racking up a game of seven-ball using a special hexagonal seven-ball rack, and incidentally also using a special 7 ball that borrows the black color and stripe, respectively, of the "money balls" in the games of eight-ball and nine-ball, to make it stand out more. The 1 ball is on the foot spot. (Closeup.) |
Racking up a game of seven-ball using a special hexagonal seven-ball rack, and incidentally also using a special 7 ball that borrows the black color and stripe, respectively, of the "money balls" in the games of eight-ball and nine-ball, to make it stand out more. The 1 ball is on the foot spot. (Expansive-view version.) |
Racking up a game of seven-ball using a special hexagonal seven-ball rack, and incidentally also using a special 7 ball that borrows the black color and stripe, respectively, of the "money balls" in the games of eight-ball and nine-ball, to make it stand out more. The 1 ball is on the foot spot. (Cropped-view version.) |
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Racking up a game of three-ball, in triangle formation, using the standard large triangle rack more commonly used for eight-ball and straight pool. In this example, the 2 ball is on the foot spot. (Expansive-view version.) |
Racking up a game of three-ball, in triangle formation, using the standard large triangle rack more commonly used for eight-ball and straight pool. In this example, the 2 ball is on the foot spot (Cropped version.) |
Racking up a game of three-ball, in triangle formation, using a miniature triangle rack specifically for three-ball. In this side-view example, the 8 ball is on the foot spot, and this is a practice-game rack — the 8 and 9 are used because they are the intimidating "money balls" in two popular games, while the 6 is used because it is the hardest to see on the green baize. |
Racking up a game of three-ball, in straight line formation, using the diamond rack more commonly used for nine-ball, but at an angle so that its side perfectly aligns the balls with the center diamonds on the head rail and foot rail. In this example, the 2 ball is on the foot spot. (Expansive-view version.) |
Racking up a game of three-ball, in straight line formation, using the diamond rack more commonly used for nine-ball, but at an angle so that side is perfectly aligns the balls with the center diamonds on the head rail and foot rail. In this example, the 2 ball is on the foot spot. (Cropped version.) |
The initial set up of bottle pool. (Expansive-view version.) |
The initial set up of bottle pool. (Cropped-view version.) |
Montage showing in bottle pool how the shake bottle is righted (upside down) where it falls (as judged by the mouth of the bottle) after being knocked over. |
A "measel ball", the relatively new, spotted cue ball used in televised tournaments in pool, and now also in snooker and carom billiards as well. The spots help demonstrate the ball-spin effects of "english". Many actual players, not just audience members, favor these balls for the same reason, and they are especially good for practice, to ensure that one has a straight stroke. (Expansive-view version.) |
A "measel ball", the relatively new, spotted cue ball used in televised tournaments in pool, and now also in snooker and carom billiards as well. The spots help demonstrate the ball-spin effects of "english". Many actual players, not just audience members, favor these balls for the same reason, and they are especially good for practice, to ensure that one has a straight stroke. (Cropped closeup.) |
A striped 8 ball, to make the "money ball" in the game of eight-ball stand out better. While originally intended for use with novelty sports team logo ball sets (this 8 ball is intended to be reminiscent of referee uniforms), it is actually ideal for color-blind players, and arguably should be used in televised eight-ball tournaments, since it better distinguishes the 8 ball from the usually very dark 4, 7 and 6 balls. |
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An oblique view of a corner pocket of a pool table. (See "billiard table" for other table types.) |
An downward view of a corner pocket of a pool table, showing the leather lattice that forms the pocket. (See "billiard table" for other table types.) |
A view of one of the two side pockets of a pool table, showing the leather lattice that forms the pocket. (See "billiard table" for other table types.) This is the broader, right-hand version of the image. |
A view of one of the two side pockets of a pool table, showing the leather lattice that forms the pocket. (See "billiard table" for other table types.) A cropped, left-hand version of the image. |
A leather shake bottle and plastic pills or peas as used in Kelly pool. |
A leather shake bottle as used in Kelly pool and bottle pool. |
A wall-mounted scoreboard for straight pool and other billiard games played to a point count. The first player uses the top sliders, and the second player the bottom ones. Scoring with this model is done in 20s. |
A typical wall-mounted rack for the storing of pool cues, billiard balls, game racks (a different sense of the term "rack"), and other pool equipment. |
An example of the kinds of marks that shooting massé shots can leave on the billiard table's baize. Oh, and there's a cue ball, of course. |
[edit] Other topics
[edit] Wikipedia-internal
The point of a barnstar; can be used as a Wikipedia award for something not quite worthy of the Minor Barnstar but still worthy of note. Works best on very pale backgrounds, such as #E6F7F7 or paler, or plain white. Was (slightly) anti-aliased for white. See example usage. |
Double-redirect arrows, for use in Wikipedia (etc.) anywhere an icon might be wanted to indicate a "redirect ⇒ [...] redirect ⇒ actual article" relationship, or something about such a relationship, such as a WikiProject for fixing double-redirects. |
A sport in Canada icon for use with WikiProject banners, stub templates, etc. |