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Table image is mostly described as an opponents perception of you, but also means your more general perception of the table. I think maybe an example would help...
I was at a rare full ring table the other day where it was possible to limp small connectors and weaker hands like J9s from early position because the table image was very TIGHT-PASSIVE. This had nothing to do with specific players, because most of the time those specific players did not act yet. One or two other people at the table were tight-aggressive. I didn't worry about them because often they would limp or fold without a really good hand preflop.
At a table with an LOOSE-AGGRESSIVE image, it would be a good idea to fold JQs or even KJs from early position because you can be certain it will be a raising pot with position on your dog. Ignore the gap theory with position on raisers because your implied odds are higher on a LOOSE-AGGRESSIVE table, and your hand has a good chance of being ahead. It's easier to committ people as well.
At a table with a LOOSE-PASSIVE image, you only raise super premium hands preflop, since isolation is usually futile (table of calling stations), and you also get more pot equity postflop if you flop hard. You get payed off. DON'T BLUFF.
So what would you do on a TIGHT-AGGRESSIVE table? Become LOOSE-AGGRESSIVE. Use the gap theory. Steal and represent, and then when you start turning them into LOOSE-PASSIVES, you become TIGHT-AGGRESSIVE to get payed off.
My descriptions are probably lacking. I'm just trying to give an idea.
A general table image for the most part is your perception of how you should play certain starting hands. Postflop is when you get into specific reads on opponent image, though exceptions do exist.
PS: In case you don't know, the gap theory is the gap that exists between hands you raise with and hands you call with. You would open raise KTs from mid position, but you wouldn't call that raise with KJo in the cutoff.
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