“The colors are true to the photos and can easily be distinguished even in poor lighting. I have received several sample sets, and these are one of the two in the running for which set I will purchase. While the secondary colors are pretty, I find them mildly distracting and will see if others find them too distracting (I don't). The color bands on the edges are distinct and easy to see.
I should mention that I got several samples from another vendor for China clays and found serious quality control issues. I resisted this advice at first, but I'm now a believer: Get samples before you make a big purchase!”
“These are AWESOME CHIPS that i will pass down to my son. These will be used for decades to come and there will be table talk about grandpas love for hold ‘em poker and these3 chips. Thanks for an incredibly beautiful set!”
“I am not an expert in poker chips. I do not have multiple sets. I know what I like, and will attempt to elaborate on that. These chips are, in fact, excellent. They have a nice linen finish to the top and bottom which makes the chip have an excellent tactile feel, which also stops the slippery or tacky feeling which might occur on a perfectly smooth chip. The edges are smooth with what feels like a slightly beveled edge. The tops and bottoms are also excellently smooth and even. There are no spinners, and when pressing on the side of a stack of chips, the chips stay absolutely dead level.
The chips feel 'light' compared to the heavier metal slug style chips, but maintain absolutely the weight promised, 10g +/- 0.2g They play excellently on a surface and stack well without sipping or falling. They have a "lighter" sound when clinking together, very much like you might hear from a china cup hitting a dish.
The colors look muted and 'matte' compared to the official color patterns, due to the linen finish. I might even describe them as looking 'dusty'. This is a small trade-off to maintain an excellent and enjoyable 'finger feel' when touching the chips. The 'black' chip is true black but looks purple-blue in the photographs.”