Baize
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Baize is a coarse woollen (or in cheaper variants cotton) cloth.
Usage[edit source | edit]
Baize is most often used on snooker and billiards tables to cover the slate and cushions, and is often used on other kinds of gaming tables such as those for blackjack, baccarat, craps and other casino games.
The surface finish of baize is not very fine (and thus increases friction, perceptibly slowing the balls down, from a player's perspective). Baize is available with and without a perceptible nap. Snooker, in which understanding of the effects of the nap is part of the game, uses the nappy variety, while pool (pocket billiards) and carom billiards use the napless type. Table baize is available in many grades, with pool halls preferring smooth, "fast" worsted woollen baize, while rather more fuzzy, "slow" cloth is commonly used for bar/pub pool.[citation needed]
For gaming use, baize is traditionally dyed green, in mimicry of a lawn (see Cue sport, "History"), thus the common phrase "the green baize", a synecdochal way to refer to snooker itself. Today, a wide variety of colours are now used for tables (for other uses such as clothing it has always been available in other colours).[citation needed]
At one time, "the green baize door" (a door to which cloth had been tacked to deaden noise) in a house separated the servants' quarters from the family's living quarters;[1] thus the phrase's usage as a general metonymy, for domestic service.
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Introduction in England[edit source | edit]
A mid-17th century English ditty (a short, simple popular song)—much quoted in histories of ale and beer brewing in England—refers to 1525 as the year:
Hops, heresies, bays, and beer;
Came into England all in one year.
Heresies refers to the Protestant Reformation, while bays is the Elizabethan spelling for baize.[2]
See also[edit source | edit]
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Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Baize. |
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References[edit source | edit]
- ^ See Graham Greene, The Fallen Idol (originally The Basement Room; Penguin; 1976; page 125)
- ^ Life in Elizabethan England; Good English Ale; accessed 20 February 2011.
External links[edit source | edit]
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