Table GamesPub GamesGiant GamesBoard GamesOutdoorsTile & Dice GamesCard Games
Table GamesPub GamesGiant GamesBoard GamesOutdoorsTiles and DiceCard Games


See all .  

Set of 10 Bottle Style Skittles

Pins

Set of 10 Bottle Style Skittles

Due to the influence of American Ten Pin Bowling, some customers have requested 10 pin sets in this non-traditional style. The pins are relatively thin and so will allow a smaller pin diamond that might suit skittle alleys and portable skittle alleys that are a bit narrower than is typical.

These pins are great for fairs, portable skittle alleys and other fun places but don't try putting them into a pub or using them in a skittle league unless you enjoy being villified!

The pins are turned from Rubberwood- timber that will deteriorate over time by denting rather than splitting. Ideally they should be rubbed down with an linseed oil rag at the end of each session.

Pins may be made from more than one piece of laminated timber. Please refer to our Timber Quality Statement.

Made in Britain

 Hover over dimensions
 to convert
Change to $
Change to €
UK pounds
(ex.VAT)
Pounds
(incl.
VAT)
ETA in
workg. days
Add to
basket

Mini 10 Pin Bottle Style Skittles - Rubberwood

Approx dimensions: 10 x 3.5 inches

£136.58 £163.90 Eng/Wales:
4 wk.days

For an immediate quote and ETA, add to the basket & select your location.

Balls

We would suggest the 4 inch phenolic resin balls to match the mini bottle style skittles. Skittle Ball information.

 Hover over dimensions
 to convert
Change to $
Change to €
UK pounds
(ex.VAT)
Pounds
(incl.
VAT)
ETA in
workg. days
Add to
basket

3 black phenolic resin skittle balls - 4 inch

Approx dimensions: 4 inch diameter, 1lb 12oz

£83.25 £99.90 Eng/Wales:
4 wk.days

3 black phenolic resin skittle balls - 4.5 inch

Approx dimensions: 4.5 inch diameter, 2lbs 8oz

£94.92 £113.90 Eng/Wales:
4 wk.days

Set of 3 pink rubber skittle balls (4.5 inch)

Approx dimensions: Each ball 4.5 inch diameter (2.5lbs)

£95.75 £114.90 Eng/Wales:
2 wk.days

For an immediate quote and ETA, add to the basket & select your location.

Masters Traditional Games


Product Index
Testimonials
View Basket
About Us

Game Rules


Shortcuts
Bowls
Chess




Ideas For:
Events
Pubs
Weddings
Fairs
Disabled


01727 855058
Email Us

 

 UK based
We ship globally


Printable version of this page
 
All material on this site - © Copyright Masters Games Ltd.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Origin of Skittles

Skittles, or Nine Pins, as played in an alley has always been a popular pub game and is the ancestor of related games including ten-pin bowling and various indoor skittles variations.  The origins of the game are uncertain but in Germany, in the 3rd or 4th century, monks played a game with a kegel which was a club carried for self defence.  In the game, the kegel represented a sin or temptation and the monks would throw stones at it until they knocked it over.  The modern German term for skittles is Kegelen.  There are also two 14th century manuscripts that show a game called Kayles and depict throwers about to launch a long club-like object at eight pins and a kingpin.

The typical form of Skittles is wherein balls are thrown or rolled from one end of an alley in an effort to knock down nine pins at the other end.  Over the years, Skittles developed regional variations in the size of equipment, the rules and so forth.  In the East Midlands, people play Long Alley in which the projectiles are rough balls or small capsule shaped logs called "cheeses" and a score is only made if the cheeses bounce a single time just in front of the pins.  Old English Skittles or London Skittles, as played at the famous Freemasons Arms in Hampstead, is a majestic game in which enormous discus-shaped cheeses are flung so that they hit the skittles directly without touching the floor first. 

From these old games, various miniaturised versions appeared which were more convenient for many pubs with limited space. These include Northamptonshire Skittles and the extremely popular Table Skittles or Devil Amongst The Tailors.

The most popular version of skittles, however, is West Country Skittles wherein 9 skittles are arranged in a square at the end of an alley that might be 24 feet, sometimes much longer.  Each turn starts with all the skittles standing and consists of three balls being rolled down the alley.  If all the pins are knocked down, then they are reset.  So the maximum score in one turn is 27.

You can learn more about the History of Skittles from The Online Guide to Traditional Games.