Author: Dal Stanton
Jen’s Trove No. 4 – Reclaiming a Kaywoodie ‘Flame/Super Grain’ #11 Large Billiard
Blog by Dal Stanton
I think the reason this Kaywoodie stood out to Jen as she was rummaging through my baskets and boxes of ‘Help Me!’ pipes, was the ‘fancy stem’ and the strong, full look of the stummel. The grain is impressive and it will clean up nicely. Jen is leaving Bulgaria soon after working with us for a few years. She’s taking a trove of pipes back to the US to give to the men in her family. For her too, is the fact that each pipe she purchases will benefit our work with the Daughters of Bulgaria – helping women and girls who have been trafficked in Europe and sexually exploited. This is the second Kaywoodie she has chosen. The first was a beautiful Kaywoodie Author (See: LINK) that needed extensive rim repair. The Kaywoodie now on the work table got my attention too, on the…
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Jen’s Trove No. 3 – Meerschaum Hand Carved Vineyard Bent Billiard
Blog by Dal Stanton
This is the third pipe I’m restoring for Jen, a colleague working here in Bulgaria. She handpicked, with great care and deliberation, several pipes from my ‘Help me!’ basket (and boxes) that she desires to present as gifts to the men folk in her family when she returns to the US this summer. What makes it better, each pipe Jen culls as a gift benefits the Daughters of Bulgaria, our work here with women and girls who have been trafficked and sexually exploited. Thank you, Jen! The Meerschaum now before me caught her eye very quickly as she trolled through the many hopeful pipes! I remember acquiring this pipe from eBay last year after communicating a few times with the seller from North Carolina about bundling a few pipes she had on the auction block. One of those was an attractive French made, Pickwick Arms…
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Jen’s Trove No. 2–Perhaps a LHS London Royal Full Bent Billiard – Oom Paul
Blog by Dal Stanton
I don’t usually begin a blog with an addendum, but just before I sent this to Steve to publish on Reborn Pipes, I sent a picture of this pipe along with a few other pipes with the question, “Oom Paul or Full Bent Billiards?” Here are the two pictures I sent – the first, Jen’s #2, and two others:
This is the fun part of learning the fine art of pipe shape identification! I was identifying the third pipe, (far right) as definitely an Oom Paul – mainly by the way the shank and bowl merge vertically and then the shank/stem breaks away but stays real tight in a full bend. The other two, have more of a ¾ bend, but they also have more of a merge between shank and bowl creeping upwardly. I called the 2 on the left, full-bent Billiards for that reason. …
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Jen’s Trove #1: A Kaywoodie Author
Blog by Dal Stanton
Jenny has laid the groundwork for a pipe restorer’s dream job! Jenny has been working with us here in Sofia, Bulgaria, as an intern for the last few years and she will be transitioning back to the US at the end of the summer. She’ll be working with international students at what she considers her home territory at the University of Tennessee – Knoxville. We’ll miss her, but she has created a bittersweet gauntlet for me! She has gone through my baskets and boxes of ‘pipes-in-waiting for help’ that I have culled and collected to create a gift trove for the special men in her life when she returns to the US – brothers, brothers-in-laws, father…. She knows that the pipes I restore benefit our work with the Daughters of Bulgaria, women/girls who have been sexually exploited and trafficked throughout Europe. She wants to support…
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A difficult trust: Gift of a Grandfather – A BBB Double Star Made in England
Blog by Dal Stanton
When I study the venerable pipe on my work table, it is not a glamorous display of briar and silver bands. Some might call it a basket pipe. The two stars imprinted on the shank were an indication of a working man’s pipe – not high quality, but among those pipes accessible to normal, if not common, people who work, live, love and as is the case with us all, die. This unremarkable Apple shaped, BBB [diamond over] Double Star, MADE IN ENGLAND [over] 152, is remarkable because of the story it represents. I enjoy restoring ‘estate’ pipes because they were left to others and these pipes carry with them stories and memories of loved ones who once befriended and valued them. Greg heard from my son, Josiah, who are college buddies, that Josiah’s old man (my words not theirs!) restored ‘old’ pipes. This ‘old’ pipe…
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French Made Bruyere Garantie Bent Billiard from Burgas
Blog by Dal Stanton
I received Gary’s email when he and his wife were visiting the Bulgarian city of Burgas on the Black Sea coast. Ever since I started restoring pipes, Gary, my colleague living and working in Plovdiv, has kept his eyes open during his travels. He’s found some very nice pipes for me. The two he found at the antique shop on the main walking street in Burgas were possibilities so he landed them for me. The larger bent billiard in the pictures he sent is on my work table now. I chose it because I’m hoping for a project that doesn’t appear to be in too much need!
The only marking on the pipe is stamped on the left shank and it says, “BRUYERE” over “GARANTIE” which I’ve understood as a rather generic marking used by several manufacturers from different continental countries in Europe. On a hunch…
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GBD Trafalgar London Made Calabash – An Unexpected Hole Repair
Blog by Dal Stanton
I’m calling this GBD Trafalgar a Calabash shape, and it’s been in my “Help me!” basket for some time. I saw it on the US eBay auction block and I liked the shape and the way the grain was positioned in shaping of the flowing Calabash stummel. From what I could make out from the few pictures the seller provided, the front and back of the bowl revealed horizontal straight grain. These grain veins terminate on each flank with distinctive bird’s eye. I liked it – I bid on it – and I was happy to bring it home to Sofia, Bulgaria, where it’s now on my work table. Here are a few pictures from the seller.
The markings on the Calabash on the left side of the shank show, “GBD” in the oval over “LondonMade” curved up. The right side of the shank shows, “LONDON…
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Another L. J. Peretti of Boston – Square Shanked Rhodesian
Blog by Dal Stanton
When Jon put the L. J. Peretti out on the table I was excited. I was in Oslo, Norway, where I met up with two colleagues who work in Ukraine – we were there watching a world class biathlon event and we had a great time. Jon knew that I was restoring pipes for the Daughters of Bulgaria and had a couple pipes that he was no longer smoking. He picked the Peretti up off eBay some time ago and he passed it on to me to restore for a new steward – a task I was more than willing to take on! I grew a bit attached to the Boston-based Tobacconist L. J. Peretti Co., when I restored my first Peretti which my son had gifted me for Christmas. It was a challenge as I salvaged the original Peretti stamp on the surviving squared saddle…
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A Desirable REJECT London Made
Blog by Dal Stanton
When I came across this classic half bent billiard while I was trolling through 100s of offerings on eBay’s auction block, I paused. The first thing that claimed my attention was its size. If there was ever a ‘meat lovers sized’ pipe, to use the American burger sound bite, this would be it. The UK seller simply described it as a ‘superb large bowl’. When the pipe arrived, I measured it and it is: length 6 5/16 inches, height 2 3/8 inches, chamber diameter 7/8 inches, chamber depth 1 13/16 inches, and the full stummel width is 1 3/4 inches – 68 grams for those who weigh pipes. A fist-full of stummel! Here is the eBay picture of the Billiard.
The other interesting thing about the eBay offering was its marking. The left shank side reads “REJECT” over “LONDONMADE”. The only lead I found for this…
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