Use a Stanley knife with a hooked blade and cut right through. If it is a wrap grip unwrap it and then remove the underneath.
Try eBay or a collector.
A belly putter is designed to be anchored into your belly. You place the grip end agsinst your belly button and then simply grip the club however you want, keeping the putter pivoting around your belly button. one grip is the split grip, this is where (for a right hander) you have your left hand at the top, and right hand below it. Then there is left hand low, which is obviously left hand below your right. There is also the interlocking grip which is basically how you hold your irons. (well how the majority do)
It is worth a lot I would not remove the grip!!
A belly putter is designed to be anchored into your belly button and then you can use any variation of a putting grip you want. The idea is that the putter pivots about your belly button, and you swing it without as much use as the arms as you would find with a normal putter.
Yers I have done thos in the past and found it extremely use full!
Yes. If the putter has a split grip, both grips must be circular in cross section and at least 1.5 inches apart. The top grip must be at least 5 inches long. Otherwise, if one grip is used, the normal rules apply. (Rule 6)
To repair the wrinkling of the leather you must take the panel off of the door.1. Remove cover plate in door grip and take the 2 screws out.2. Remove the 2 white plastic clips from the bottom of the door panel3. Remove the door grip and disconnect electrical connection4. Lift panel slightly up and then away from the door5. Remove the top rail covering the leather wrapping on top of the panel6. Reglue the leather to the panel after stretching out the wrinkles7. Reverse the process of panel removal.
Yes, every club can have have a round cross section grip. Putters just have more options
Sure, or you can do it yourself. All you have to do is determine how much shorter you want the putter to be, remove the grip, cut the shaft with a pipe cutter (assuming it's a steel shaft), and replace the grip. Usually, grips are held in place with double sided tape. You need to get some solvent inside the grip and the grip will slide off easily. If that doesn't work, you may have to cut the grip off and replace it with a new one, but grips are fairly inexpensive. When replacing the grip, wrap some double sided tape around the shaft, put a little solvent on it, slide the grip back on and align it with the shaft. The solvent dries and the grip sticks in place. Good luck.
It is both durable and easy to grip.
leather, with traction for grip
those bumpy bits are for grip on top of the leather