
Felt and Finish
Cloth color changes the mood of the room. Classic green feels calm and familiar, tournament blue reads bright and focused, while softer neutrals can fit a residential design.
Design Gallery
Use this gallery to talk through slate, cloth, wood tone, lighting, storage, seating, and arcade-room balance with an advisor.

Cloth color changes the mood of the room. Classic green feels calm and familiar, tournament blue reads bright and focused, while softer neutrals can fit a residential design.

Good play begins under the cloth. We explain leveling, seams, support, and why daily players notice roll quality long after the first week.

Cues, racks, balls, brushes, and table covers should be close enough for daily use but tidy enough to keep the room welcoming.

Arcade pieces work best when sound, sight lines, and traffic flow are planned beside the pool table instead of squeezed in later.
A good table room is more than a table in the middle of the floor. It is a sequence of small decisions that make people want to stay: enough cue clearance so shots feel natural, lighting that does not glare on the cloth, seating that lets friends watch without blocking play, storage that prevents clutter, and a finish that fits the rest of the home or venue. Materials carry the feeling of the room. Slate gives stability, cloth gives speed and color, rails give touch, pockets give character, and cue wood adds the tactile ritual players remember. We like to make those choices visible. Bring photos, floor plans, fabric samples, cabinet colors, or a simple sketch. We can suggest combinations that feel friendly, durable, and ready to play.