Posted November 4, 201212 yr Seems george spirits is a famous brands in Japan, but why there are not any clubs sold in our shop? Edited November 4, 201212 yr by bdgnss
November 4, 201212 yr Not too famous, only been around for a couple of years. The brand was sold here when they first started..... not much love
November 4, 201212 yr Lots of history with George Takei the owner and I. I like him, It's just his companies seem to vanish leaving a giant S**t storm behind. If there was demand we could offer it no problem.
November 17, 201212 yr I gamed a putter from them a couple years ago that was pretty good. Moved on from it though.
November 18, 201212 yr I don't know enough about them...saw some of their wedges awhile back and I almost bought them just based on how great they looked and at a decent price.
November 19, 201212 yr George Spirits clubs are very pretty. I'm sure some people would buy some based on just appearance. To sit in an office and look pretty. lol
November 19, 201212 yr they have a colorful history. was a big fan of his previous brand Spoon you should have been a diplomat. Colorful is one word for it. On a side note, I saw a set of 'nearly new' Gauge Design irons, X100s in my favorite second hand store for only 29,000! Serious bargain.
November 21, 201212 yr Aside from GD and GS what other companies did Takei own/have a hand in? G-Field...r.i.p Love his designs just cant get over the name and logo.
November 21, 201212 yr G-Field...r.i.p Love his designs just cant get over the name and logo. I actually quite like the logo. If I was a trade mark attorney for maserati I might not though...
November 21, 201212 yr Wow you're right about "leaving a storm behind" then. All those companies are messes. I wonder why it always ends up that way.
November 21, 201212 yr Wow you're right about "leaving a storm behind" then. All those companies are messes. I wonder why it always ends up that way. Borrowed money and lack of focus where they consistently create, manufacture, and stock a complete line up from drivers to putters from the very beginning. A more conservative route should have been taken starting with a focus on putters, then wedges until they were profitable before moving on to everything else.
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