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Kevin Godbee
- Nov 28, 2011
- 1 min read
The new G.L. Pease In Celebration of Briar 2012 Calendar is now available.
This is the 6th year that Pease has produced a calendar for the pipe enthusiast. It may be the only calendar specifically catering to the lover of smoking pipes. Pease has been a professional photographer for 43-years, and it shows in the extraordinary, exquisite photography of 12 gorgeous pipes.
This is the perfect calendar for the pipe lover and the perfect gift for your pipe smoking friends – so remember to get at least two – one for yourself, and one for a friend. Then you will have one more holiday present crossed off your list.
From the G. L. Pease Site:
In Celebration of Briar – 2012 is published on demand and distributed by Lulu Press. It is printed on heavy-weight, coated stock, and is 13.5" x 19", spiral bound at the top. Interior photos are high resolution, 13.5" x 9.5", and show amazing detail. This is as close as you can get to individually custom printed images without the high cost.
Lulu prints in several countries, and ships world-wide, so the calendar is available everywhere, without high shipping costs. The price is $35. Click the link below to purchase a copy. Previous editions are also still available, and can be ordered here, for those who may want to collect the set.
You can see all of the wonderful photos and read the back story on GLPease.com, and you can order here (and remember to get one for a friend too).
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Written by Kevin Godbee

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Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 505! We have two guests tonight. In our featured segment we have Fred Hanna returning. Fred is a well-known pipe collector, author, and speaker at pipe shows. He has a PhD. in psychology and teaches the same at the Chicago Campus at Adler University. He is also author of the book, âThe Perfect Smokeâ. This is the seventh in a recurring series with a long form discussion of pipe and tobacco questions sent in by our listeners. In the opening âPipe Partsâ segment, our guest is Ash from The Chapâs Guide YouTube Channel. This will also be a recurring series with practical tips on things like dressing sharply, hats, watches, journaling and many other areas that tend to cross over with pipe enthusiastâs interests. Tonight, we will chat about tailoring. Sit back, relax with your pipe, and enjoy The Pipes Magazine Radio Show!
Welcome to The Pipes Magazine Radio Show Episode 504! We have a special format for tonight’s show. We will have Brian moderating two well-known pipe artisans asking each other questions and discussing pipe making. This is the final episode in a three part series with Jeff Gracik, and Jody Davis. Jeff makes J. Alan Pipes and is an expert, artisan pipe maker for nearly 20-years. Jody is a renowned pipe artisan, and the lead guitar player for the Grammy-nominated Christian rock band, The Newsboys. The guys will take up the entire show except for the mailbag at the end, and REALLY BIG ANNOUNCEMENT! Be sure to listen to the entire show. Sit back, relax with your pipe, and enjoy The Pipes Magazine Radio Show!
The late Bill Unger, long-time secretary/treasurer of the North American Society of Pipe Collectors and editor of the Pipe Collector newsletter, was often quoted as saying, âIf you have one pipe, youâre a pipe smoker. If you have two pipes, youâre a collector.â The question of what makes an aggregate of pipes an actual âcollectionâ is something that Iâve often struggled with, and every attempt to pin things down has found me in the weeds. Collectors of most objets dâart tend to have some sort of focus, and to take the stance that my focus is on âpipesâ has always felt a bit like a cheap way out. I have friends who collect a certain shape, or a certain makerâs work, or pipes from a specific country or era. One specializes in straight grain, always seeking the next incremental step towards perfection, while never accumulating too many pieces. I, on the other hand, have never been a specialist, but the term generalist doesnât adequately describe my proclivity either. Over the years, as my tastes have changed and evolved, Iâve chased many different styles of pipe, resulting in an embarrassingly large gathering of briars that range from the most traditional to the frankly weird. Is it really a âcollectionâ when the only thing that ties its elements together is not a thread but a mooring rope? Once, I was most interested in bulldogs, especially the squat bowl variant. One of my first good pipes was a GBD in this shape; so early along my collecting journey, I didnât even know what the shape was called, but I was attracted by its almost UFO-like styling – I just found the shape engaging, Learning more about classic shapes, I began to look at other bulldog variants, and found myself gravitating towards the bent versions, especially rhodesians, with their round shanks, squat, voluptuous bulldog-esque bowls, and that wonderfully comfortable half-bend. I gathered quite a few of them, ranging in size from small to quite large, and thought Iâd found my niche. Of course, this wouldn’t last forever, and soon other shapes caught my attention. The prince, long and elegant, with its wider bowl and gentle curve seemed like maybe it was the perfect shape. Its slender shank and long stem result in a light pipe that keeps the smoke out of your eyes. Iâve also often posited that there is no better âpointing pipeâ than the prince. Then came the lovats. Their compact shape, short saddle mouthpieces and capacious bowls seemed to be my ideal. And, speaking of compact shapes, the little âbrucianaso,â exemplified by the Castello #10, was so appealing, I found myself chasing them at a time when they were exceedingly rare. The billiard, at one time, seemed sort of boring to me, but it is such a classic shape, and when cut really nicely, has its own beauty and charm. Now, I have quite a few of them. And there are the apples, with their thick, curvaceous bowls that feel so good in the hand. And the Castello #55 pot, one of Carlo Scottiâs personal faves. Get the picture? Like a butterfly, I have always flitted from shape to shape, extracting the nectar of whatever form appealed to me at the moment before moving on to the next flower. But it was always the more classic shapes, the pipes from England, France, and to a degree, those from Italy that held my interest. Then, in the late 1990s, something changed, and I became attracted to some of the Danish styles, not so much the wild âfreehandâ shapes, but the modernist interpretations of classic pipe forms that came from the minds and hands of the early masters. The direction of Danish pipe making was born out of a functionalist design aesthetic, where minimalism and function, elegance and nuance held priority over the ornate. These makers took familiar forms and rendered them with sleeker lines, softer curves, and a more minimalist approach. Some were additionally inspired by nature, bringing new words to the vocabulary of pipe shapes. I was intrigued, and as more of these shapes found their way into my group, they scribbled another page of an increasingly disorganized book. They didnât displace my beloved classics, but expanded my appreciation in yet another direction. Oh, and those crazy freehands? What can I say; some of those shapes are so wildly conceived, how could I ignore them? The butterfly finds flowers wherever they are. Mostly, Iâve just accepted, or ignored my rather mercurial tastes, but once in a while, something happens to bring my âstrategyâ into question. The other day, I was enticed by a beautiful piece by American maker Ryan Alden. Iâve known Ryan for years, and have bought a couple of his pieces, but this pipe lived outside of his norm, and mine. I had to have it. (Itâs the sandblast piece in the accompanying photographs.) Iâm not even sure I know what to call it. Urchin-esque? Squat apple? Cinnamon bun? Tomato? Nothing quite fits, but, as soon as I had it in hand, I realized that a couple other pieces I have bear similar profiles, like the pictured Bengt Carlson rusticated and bamboo-shanked piece by Taiwanâs Jerry Zenn. Will these three pipes become the cornerstone of a new direction, a new sub-collection? Iâm not sure, but at the moment, I kind of hope so. I certainly have more than one pipe, so in deference to a dear departed friendâs memory, Iâll just try to accept his definition and find peace within my capricious nature. I am a pipe collector.
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Ah, the joys of spring. April showers bringing May flowers, trees budding, birds flitting in fits of joy, and hope springing eternal. As our friend e.e. cummings said, âalways itâs spring and everyoneâs in loveâ. Ah, love, yes, above all love. Have you ever fallen in love? With a pipe, that is. Yes, dear brothers of the briar, a pipe so fetching you are mesmerized by its glimmering beauty. Letâs go back some years. The Pundit was in an Alabama brick and mortar pipes and tobacco shop (memory says it was The Briary in Homewood) when naturally, the subject of pipes and tobacco took center stage in the conversation. The genteel chap behind the counter asked me if I had ever thought of owning a Claudio Cavicchi pipe? Well, no. For back in those youthful days Iâd never even heard of a Cavicchi pipe, let alone a Claudio Cavicchi. âOh,â said the gentleman behind the counter, âwe have only a couple here. One is a gorgeous Canadian.â The Canadian was a blond beauty. I was moonstruck with thunderbolt love and pulled out my thin wallet. I threw in a pouch of Virginia tobacco to break in my new beauty. âYou wonât be disappointed,â he called out after me. That Cavicchi hit me like a dancing string of lightning. It was a shimmering slim magnificence, purity of line and spirit. I became fascinated and wanted to know everything I could about the actual Mister Claudio Cavicchi. Lo, he was but a humble Italian farmer. But upon studying nature in his daily life, and experiencing renewal and growth from the Earth, Claudio one day decided he could craft pipes as well as crops. He became an artisanal pipe maker, a craftsman of world-renown, a master of design. Dear reader, there is a world of science and physics involved in his pipe creations and immaculate stains that just make the pipeâs grain glow. His meticulousness gave rise to his unique grading system ranging from a single âCâ to a quintuple of âCs.â More âCsâ translates to higher grades of briar. Claudio also creates his seldom seen Perla as well as the extremely rare âDiamante,” both absolute zeniths of the Cavicchi line. But as youth are often unpredictable and sometimes dismay us elders with unique logic (strengths, my dear lads, for you usher in the new and keep us elders on our toes and we thank you for doing so!) so was I in those years so long ago. And for reasons I still cannot fathom, I let a pal talk me into trading my lovely Cavicchi Canadian for some sort of English pipe. Looking back in time from this wizened vantage, I must ask myself: what in the world was I thinking? âNothing, apparentlyâ is the only reply the universe has so far provided. That trade bothered me many years. Until this spring, that is dear reader. For reasons I cannot fathom, luck favored me again with the recent discovery of another beautiful blond Cavicchi Canadian. Yes, the price had gone up a bit, but that didnât matter. I had to have the Canadianâs return to my precious herd. It was ordered along with another pouch of Virginia, just like the first iteration of so long ago. The new blond beauty smoked wonderfully well, just as did the original I let get away. Only this Canadian was a slightly better Cavicchi grade. Rest assured, it now holds down a permanent place in the Pundit rotation. I can see the wrinkles on your faces: But itâs just another Canadian, and why the Virginia tobacco to christen a new pipe? Well, my friends, if you have not yet tried a Cavicchi, itâs like the briar and leaf Meister behind that pipe and tobacco counter in Alabama said so long ago, âYou wonât be disappointed.â For Claudio has that most sacred and, anymore at least, rare power: an agrarian connection to the land. A farmer who, to know success, attunes himself to natureâs rhythms and mysteries, beguilements, and cycles. As Pearl S. Buck said in The Good Earth, âand roots, if they are to bear fruits, must be kept well in the soil of the land.â For after all, what is briar but a root ball transformed by wood sculptors? If you need more encouragement, check out two wonderful pieces on Claudio: In The Workshop With Claudio Cavicchi June 22, 2016, by Shane Ireland in Makers and Artists âŚand Chuck Stanionâs A Closer Look At Claudio Cavicchi Dec. 17, 2018, in Makers and Artists at SmokingPipes.com I love these lines from Chuckâs insight into Cavicchiâs artistry: âThis is a craftsman who knows pipes from many perspectives. He knows what makes a pipe smoke well and what makes a pipe look beautiful. He knows how to charm the briar to his bidding.â Now, concerning tobacco, if you wonder at Punditâs preference for pure Virginia, please refer to the late and lamented McClelland No. 5100 Red Cake. I learned the Virginia break-in trick from a veteran pipe smoker, a medical doctor in fact, who taught me to always break in a new pipe with Virginia because of its ability to rid a new bowl of any lingering baddies and thereby prepare it for just about any sort of future tobacco blend you throw at it. His choice was McClellandâs 5100 Red Cake. Thatâs because Virginia tobaccos (along with burleys, perique, and Cavendish) play such a significant role in todayâs blends. In olden times, pipe smokers pulled out a pouch of pure burley, loaded up, and smoked through the day. Todayâs blenders are magicians, true chefs of tobacco blends. Now the Pundit is no tobacco blender, but Iâm at least smart enough to abide the advice of veterans. If youâll allow me to linger on the topic of blends, Iâll share with you by way of the Chicagoland Pipe Show that Virginia slices are a good choice when breaking in tobacco blends as well. And dear reader, […]
This cellar-diving kick is really paying off, considering the time and effort that went into stocking the coffers with tobacco meant to be enjoyed with some age on its side. This monthâs candidate for review is a tin of JackKnife Plug dated 6th April 2011, among the first production runs of this blend from the New World Collection. Having done a release review for it and its fraternal twin JackKnife Ready Rubbed back in 2012, and seeing as this tin is just reaching its eleventeenth birthday, it seems a fitting time to revisit what Mr. Pease hath wrought. Opening the tin with no small amount of anticipation, one can really appreciate the way patience can pay off with tobacco. The aromatics release with a whoosh of pressure, itself an immensely satisfying sound while peeling back the lid. The scents fill the air immediately, strong and sweet tones that flood the entire room: up front, the rich bitter sweetness of a Terryâs Dark Chocolate Orange, bakerâs chocolate; developing over some time with nuances like rich mulched earth, brand new leather shoes, a phenolic tinge reminiscent of Dettol or pine tar, and an underlying meatiness of a lightly-charred steak. Over the course of a couple of weeks making my way through the tin, the aroma tempers down to a more familiar chocolate-covered cherry cordial with layers of parchment and a briney umami saltiness like soy or Worcestershire sauce. Itâs tempting, with all this chocolaty aroma, to take a bite out of the brownie-like bar of tobacco, a feeling Iâm surely not alone in contemplating. The presentation does however invite closer inspection of the tobacco, such a tangible thing when in bar form. This 11-year-old plug is only lightly dusted with the whitish âsugar crystalsâ often found on aged Virginia blends, and peering into the layers from outermost to innermost there is a general uniformity of color and texture all the way throughâagain, and not to belabor the point, but the color is a rich, bitter dark chocolate-brown that perfectly mirrors the aromas. The composition of this blend is clearly no accident, no haphazard mashing together of leaf. Greg clearly set out with a goal in mind: exploring the breadth and depth of the character that could be created when working with the darling of the pipe tobacco world at the time, dark-fired Kentucky. Dark-fired enjoyed a bit of a heyday with the release of these GLP offerings, as well as a host of others such as MacBarenâs HH Old Dark Fired. Speaking on the composition of JK Plug versus Ready-Rubbed, he notes: The blend is identical, with one small exception. The plug is constructed with a core of brights, and the darker tobaccos surrounding it. This allows the brights, theoretically, to express themselves with more purity in the blend. Theyâre not under as great an influence from the fire-cured and red tobaccos. Doing this with the [Ready Rubbed] wouldnât work well, because of the way the tobacco clumps, so the blocks are not stratified in this way. The same tobaccos in the same measures are just layered and pressed for the same length of time, then the blocks are sliced and tumbled. Itâs the same technique used for the Old London mixtures. It was also clearly intended with aging in mind; again, in Gregâs own words: When I first designed the stuff, I had no idea what the future would bring. There was certainly no reason to think it would do anything but age wonderfully, but you never know. The plug form causes internal anaerobic fermentation, while the outer layers are still exposed to plenty of air. The other night, I opened an 8-month old tin of the final prototype. The aroma was intoxicating, and the smoke was HUGE. I think it’s safe to say it’s going to age really, really nicely. And quickly. I would have believed the tobacco in that tin to have been 5 years old already. With more than a decade under the hood waiting to prove or disprove this theory, the bar was sliced thin and thick, folded, rubbed, and stuffed into a variety of bowl geometries to tease out its flavors, and the results are resoundingly positive. The verdict? JackKnife Plug has the character and complexion of the heartiest of English blends, while being completely absent of Latakia or Oriental leaf. It ages like a peaty single-malt of the finest provenance, developing layers and depth that belie the relative simplicity of its ingredients. I quickly gravitated toward a wider, open-chambered pipe for tasting, one that I would generally use for English blends, as it naturally accommodated the finer nuances of the smokeâand the smoke is certainly huge. The top of the bowl starts with a piccolo-like overture from the Virginia-Perique nexus, with a peppery nose prominently laying the groundwork for whatâs to comeâthink Shostakovichâs 6th, first movement (in fact, this piece is a good parallel overall; perhaps without quite as much of the bombast of later movements). The sweetness is surprisingly underplayed, howeverâthe Perique quickly becomes a background spice, lending sour notes while falling in step with the harmony of the Virginiaâs more leathery tones. The sharp edges are all well-rounded over here; far from being able to bite, this smoke develops a thick, steak-dinner mouthfeel almost immediately, one which lingers for a good while after the pipe is finished. By mid-bowl the full composition really comes together, with the darker smokiness of the Kentucky burley stepping center stage even while some of the sweetness sneaks back in. In fact, for beverage pairings I favor an extra-sweet iced tea or soft drink as personal preference. The umami of mid-bowl builds and builds through to the heel, as the chocolaty and nutty tones segue into barbecue woods and steak char, with a touch of Worcestershire still interwoven from the Periqueâs spice. Somewhat surprisingly for such a stout blend, the nicotine does not overwhelmâitâs a solid medium-plus, though, best enjoyed after a meal. While my preference with the plug […]
It arrived!!
Could do with a link to G L Pease on this page.
So, which one of the *13* pipes isn’t gorgeous? đ It’s actually twelve months plus the cover.
Each year, I continue to be impressed with the service and the quality Lulu Press offers. Every page is printed on heavy cover stock, unlike some POD printers who only use the heavy paper for the cover. The printing is excellent, and their service is fantastic. Now, with contract printers all over the world, there are no international shipping costs, which is a huge savings for international buyers, and it’s completely transparent. Just order, and they’ll route it to the closest printer to you.
@tobakenist – “Could do with a link to G L Pease on this page.”
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There is a link in the last sentence.
Oops. Sorry about that Greg. There’s 12 months plus the cover.
Nice – just made my own “pipe” calendar with my collection.