Even though the Chicago Pipe Show officially starts today, on Saturday, May 1st, lots of things have already happened. The Chicago Pipe Show is in it’s 15th year. It has long ago become the largest, most prominent pipe show in the world.
It has grown so large that even though the official show is on the weekend, there is a “pre-show” that starts on Wednesday. After the official show ends, there is a “post-show” on Monday. We arrived on Tuesday, and spent 10 hours on Wednesday inspecting and logging 515 Estate Pipes, but more on that later.
Here are photos of various aspects and activities from the pre-show days.
For more of our coverage of the 2010 Chicago Pipe Show, Click on the following links:
The Conference Room Table in Our Suite
We needed a “sweet suite” to accommodate the sale of 515 estate pipes from a prominent Hollywood celebrity. PipesMagazine.com was chosen by his estate to broker the sale since we have contacts in the industry. We are not at liberty to name the celebrity at this point.
Here’s some more pictures of our two-story suite at the beautiful Pheasant Run Resort. The Living Room The King Size Bed The Whirlpool Tub Pipesmagazine.com Sexy Secretary Looking Upstairs from the Conference Room The Library More of the Library in the Resort Pheaston Run has a Replica of Bourbon Street in New Orleans Bourbon Street The Participants in the Pipe Making Workshop The Participants in the Pipe Making Workshop Pipe Making Workshop Pipe I Wonder What This One Will Look Like When it is Done? Sand Blast Machine Alex Florov, Brian Ruthenberg, Rex Poggenpohl, Jeff Gracik Dunhill Estate Pipes in our Room We Inspected Hundreds of Dunhill Pipes It was a lot of work, but still fun dealing with hundreds of Dunhills Brian Levine & Sykes Wilford of SmokingPipes.com Logging Pipes
We spent 10 hours sorting and logging pipes into spreadsheets. We started at 1:30 pm and went straight until 7:30 pm. Then we took a three hour break for dinner and smoking. We resumed our work at 10:30 and finished at 1:00 am. It's a Tough Job, But Somebody's Got to Do It Welcome to the Chicago Pipe Show 2010 Bob Tate & Kevin Godbee in Our PipesMagazine.com Shirts Kevin Godbee, Mike "Doc" Garr, Bob Tate Pre-Show Pipes for Sale Beautiful Grain on this Pipe Gorgeous Bird's Eye Try Not to Drool Bob Tate Inspecting Pipes Joel Shurtleff of TheBriarPipe.com We are in Pipe Heaven Bob Gilbert aka Staffwalker on PM.com I Feel Like a Kid in a Candy Store Bob Tate & John Tolle - Everyone Should have a NASPC Membership More and more Pipes! Russ Ouellette & Bob Tate Laurita Bonita Had to Go Home for the weekend and let the boys play Headin' Home in PipesMagazine.com Style Bob Gilbert's Pipes The Smoking Tent A Haze of Smoke Jeff A. Burt-Gracik's Pipes Jeff Gracik
Publisher & Founder of PipesMagazine.com
Certified Master Tobacconist (CMT) #1858 from TobacconistUniversity.org
My grandfather didn't smoke a pipe, but my uncle and some of my elementary school teachers did. In 1998, my neighbor Sam invited me out, and we ended up back at his place where there was a cigar humidor, and pipe rack on the coffee table. I had my first cigar, and then decided to try pipes too. I love the elegance and relaxation of smoking a pipe. In 2002, I started learning how to make websites, do SEO, and create content. I had a cigar content site and forums from 2005-2008 when it was bought out. In 2009, I launched PipesMagazine.com, which is now the largest, busiest community forums, and article content site for pipe and tobacco enthusiasts. We have one of the longest running pipe and tobacco focused podcasts since 2012 with lifetime industry veteran, Brian Levine.
Kevin,
I know that she’s taken, but that secretary!
Phooey on pipes!
The Show looks fantastic ! Wish I were there ! Thanks Guys for letting us share in what went on . Thanks Again .
Thanks for the vicarious peek.
Wow, wow and wow. Looks great and wish I could be there too. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for sharing the pics! Cool stuff and good times
Thanks guys, that Bob Gilbert makes some really beautiful pipes, doesn’t he? For what it’s worth, you guys do a hell’va job covering the various shows and it’s appreciated!!
Someday I’ll make it to the show. Lived in N. Chicago from 1984 to 1987, wherein my ex threw out my pipe collection. Never made it to the show then, either, if it existed. Anyway, I have now rebuilt my pipe collection to 35 pipes, and will start to post them on my new web site, http://the-pure-epicurean.com
Very cool preview to the show. I lived about 5 miles from the Pheasant Run and now i’m down here in Fla drooling at all that pipe euphoria LOL!!!
what an amazing show..i’m so impressed with what pipe magazine have done.i hope one day i’ll be there.
Hey Guys,Thanks for keeping everyone updated on what’s going on in the pipe smoking world. Now if we could just get you to do a weekly podcast that won’t die in 6 months or a year that would be great.
Seriously, thanks for all your hard work.
Nelson
SHPC Boston
Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 658. Our featured interview on tonight’s show is with Bo Parker. Bo is the new co-host of the Pipe and Tamper Podcast, which is the second longest running pipe podcast after this one. Bo started as the co-host in January 2025, and he is also a member of the Heretics Pipe Club. He is a professional coffee roaster and has the best “first time I smoked a pipe story” ever. At the top of the show, we will have another edition of the virtual tour of Brian’s pipe collection with four more Smio Satou pipes.
Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 657. Our featured interview on tonight’s show is with Ben Smith of Redeemed Pipes. Ben is a pipe restorer, buyer and seller. He helps collectors find the estate pipes they are looking for. He started Redeemed Pipes in 2022 at his first Chicago pipe show. He deals with all types of pipes from artisan to factory-made. He actually started smoking pipes in 2017, and soon became obsessed, and quickly progressed to collecting artisan pipes himself. At the top of the show Brian will discuss “Estate Pipe Buying 101”.
Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 656. Our featured interview on tonight’s show is with Nate King, the “King of Pipes” and of In-N-Out Burger. Most people know of Nate as an excellent pipe artisan. He also has an honorary Master of Pipes degree from the Chicagoland Pipe Collectors Club, and is a member of the prestigious Confrérie des Maitres Pipiers de Saint-Claude. Prior to becoming a pipe maker in 2005, Nate worked in the Indy race business as a transmission specialist. At the top of the show Brian will have a tobacco review of Low Country Atalaya. It is a Virginia/Perique blend made in the Cornell & Diehl factory.
Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 655. Our featured interview tonight is with Mike Morales. Mike showed up at the Vegas pipe show last year with a bunch of professional video equipment and spontaneously arranged interviews with show exhibitors and Brian. The video he produced was at a professional level of a TV show, so Brian had to have him on the show. Mike is a pipe smoking enthusiast that is quite intrigued with the community aspect and history of pipe smoking. He is on a journey to devour as much of this information and experience as possible. At the top of the show we will have an Ask the Tobacco Blender segment with Jeremy Reeves. Jeremy is the Head Blender at Cornell & Diehl, which is one of the most popular boutique pipe tobacco companies in the USA.
Ahh, Spring has sprung! Cherry blossoms are sprouting into bloom, the weather is giving some of us a bit of relief (looking at you, allergies). But there is also the other side—the, uh, spring cleaning side. I’m talking pipe herd spring cleaning, of course. Over the years, the herd has become unruly and very inconsiderate. Pipes seem to arrive and begin elbowing for a spot in the numerous pipe rack stalls. So, I began a long journey this current spring to shoo away the unwanted, weed out the ugly growths, and start afresh. Dear friends, there are hundreds in the herd! See, Pundit began his pipe smoking journey and pursuit of happy hobby hunting in college. I admired my pipe-puffing erudite English Lit professors, the fuzzy history profs, and pomp and circumstance philosopher profs, one of whom entered the classroom, smoking a pipe and reciting “ Sic Parvis Magna,” or another of his favorite Latin phrases. I always loved hearing that prof walking in from the back of the classroom and spouting over his clenched pipe, that Latin phrase “greatness from small beginnings.” What wasn’t so much fun arrived at the end of a year-long study of Shakespeare. The Shakespearean scholar teaching the class penned a note at the end of the single exam we had all year, “Deus vobiscum,” God be with you. English Lit majors had to make a B or higher on the exam in order not to repeat the year-long study of The Bard. I was in my senior year, as were most of the Lit majors. Repeating the year was not the best of outcomes. I digress. Back to the herd. In all my searching, I always wanted to find an estate pipe carved and created (ahem, like me, of course) in my birth year. Now, we won’t go into the actual birth date itself, but let’s just say it ranges around World War II. I never found that estate pipe, but the herd is full of old and dated versions around that birth year. Some very new herd additions help ease that search. There are so many old memories and stories surrounding the ancients, though. One quick one for you. This happened on a beautiful catch-and-release Ozark Mountain river stream along the Missouri and Arkansas border. The stream was one of those mystical waters. Mists floating off the morning current whets the imagination in anticipation of mayflies or caddisflies emerging from larvae to pupae, rising to the surface, drying its wings and taking flight in a new form, promising me greatness from their small beginnings. I was enjoying my pipe, casting for wild trout when I heard a shout behind me. It originated from a rock-dimpled canoe. A large bearded fellow slapped the paddle beside me as the entourage of two bearded guys and two bathing suit clad ladies floated by. The loud smack on the water scattered the trout, ending fly fishing on that stretch. Time to retreat. As I slowly backed upstream, keeping an eye on the dented canoe, it crunched ashore on a nearby sandy stretch. The bearded guy in front got out and as one of the ladies was emerging, he snatched off the top of her bathing suit. I sped up my retreat as the shouting began. In the melee, I dropped my pipe into the stream, but quickly retrieved it with my fishing net. Pipes always produce the best memories and stories. Pipe Smokers of the Past: Albert Einstein, Mr. E=mc2 was born March 14, 1879, and died April 18, 1955. He was a celebrated theoretical physicist and pipe smoker, and seldom seen without his pipe and puffy plumes of Revelation tobacco floating above his bristly bushy head of hair. I never think of the future. It comes soon enough—Albert Einstein Albert King, Mississippi blues man, and guitar master, was born in Indianola, Miss., April 25, 1923, and died Dec. 21, 1992, in Memphis, Tenn. He was known as “King of the Blues Guitar,” and sometimes, “King of the Pipe,” since he often smoked his pipe while playing a blues gig. Rose Kiser has an excellent biography of King and his love of pipes in a Nov. 10, 2023, Pipe Line column at SmokingPipes.com. A quote from one of his blues songs: All your loneliness I’ll try to soothe, I’ll play the blues for you—Albert King, “I’ll Play the Blues for You”. A parting shot: Pipes provide us with fond farewells in our memory. They have been friends and family, there for all the happy times as well as the difficult days, as we all experience. It’s sad to see some leave the fold, but there are fresh rose-tipped horizons to be seen with a new kid joining the beloved herd.
Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 654. Our featured interview tonight is with Rich Esserman. Rich is one of our regular guests that has been on the show many times, and is returning after a one-year hiatus. Rich has penned innumerous articles about pipes and tobacco for several publications, and he is known for collecting quite large pipes. We’ll get caught up with Rich and see what’s new with him. At the top of the show in our Pipe Parts segment Brian will talk about the “Delayed Gratification Technique” or “DTG” as we call it in the forums.
Kevin,
I know that she’s taken, but that secretary!
Phooey on pipes!
The Show looks fantastic ! Wish I were there ! Thanks Guys for letting us share in what went on . Thanks Again .
Thanks for the vicarious peek.
Wow, wow and wow. Looks great and wish I could be there too. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for sharing the pics! Cool stuff and good times
Thanks guys, that Bob Gilbert makes some really beautiful pipes, doesn’t he? For what it’s worth, you guys do a hell’va job covering the various shows and it’s appreciated!!
Someday I’ll make it to the show. Lived in N. Chicago from 1984 to 1987, wherein my ex threw out my pipe collection. Never made it to the show then, either, if it existed. Anyway, I have now rebuilt my pipe collection to 35 pipes, and will start to post them on my new web site, http://the-pure-epicurean.com
Very cool preview to the show. I lived about 5 miles from the Pheasant Run and now i’m down here in Fla drooling at all that pipe euphoria LOL!!!
what an amazing show..i’m so impressed with what pipe magazine have done.i hope one day i’ll be there.
Hey Guys,Thanks for keeping everyone updated on what’s going on in the pipe smoking world. Now if we could just get you to do a weekly podcast that won’t die in 6 months or a year that would be great.
Seriously, thanks for all your hard work.
Nelson
SHPC Boston
Very nice