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Billiard ball

A close-up picture of pool balls

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US Billiard balls

In the US, Billiard balls are balls used to play the game of US billiards. The balls are numbered and colored as follows:

  1. yellow
  2. blue
  3. red
  4. purple
  5. orange
  6. green
  7. brown
  8. black
  9. yellow and white
  10. blue and white
  11. red and white
  12. purple and white
  13. orange and white
  14. green and white
  15. brown and white

Note that balls 1–7 are often referred to as "solids" and 9–15 as "stripes".

European Billiard balls

In the UK and Europe, Billiard balls are the three balls used to play the games, known variously as English billiards or Carambole billiards (of which Three cushion billiards is a variant) but generally just "billiards" within respective countries. European billiard balls are not numbered. They are coloured as follows:

  • Red
  • White Cue ball for player 1
  • White with a spot (now sometimes yellow) Cue ball for player 2

Composition of billiard balls

In the past, many balls were made of ivory; since the animals that produced this have become endangered species, other materials, such as wood and various plastics have been used.

In 1865, John Wesley Hyatt patented a composition material resembling ivory (Celluloid) for a billiard ball (US50359), winning $10,000 prize from Phelan and Collender of New York City for the best substitute for ivory. This was the first U.S. patent for billiard balls.

Modern billiard balls are most often made from phenolic resin.

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