Pipe Collection Succession Planning

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dunnyboy

Lifer
Jul 6, 2018
2,690
33,837
New York
What do you plan to do with your pipe collection once you cease to smoke? I realize this a morbid question, and likely a private one too, but I doubt I'm the only one who's thought about it. Especially for those gentlemen and ladies with large, high caliber collections, succession planning must be a consideration.

Many of these collections, I suspect, will be broken up and put up for auction. Considering the time and love and erudition that went into amassing them, that seems a shame. What we need is a pipe museum to which these collections, including their pipe-related paraphernalia, can be donated (for a tax deduction)—with a digital catalogue that can be referenced and enjoyed by pipe smokers around the world. I have no idea who would sponsor such a museum but the great folks at Laudisi come to mind.

My plan, yet to conveyed to my wife, is to send my small collection to Smoking Pipes estates. My heirs can realize a modest return and the pipes can have a future life.
 
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bootlegpipes

Can't Leave
Oct 21, 2024
459
726
My plan, which my offspring already know about, involves five contacts and this Forum with my information.

I have pipes way too valuable for Smoking Pipes, no shade on them, but there are better ways.

Mind you, I’m 62 and have no plans of sucking starting a pistol or ending up in a ditch anytime soon.
If one of those 5 croak before you do, let me know how I can apply for his spot.
 

Mike N

Lifer
Aug 3, 2023
1,097
7,171
Northern Panhandle of West Virginia
I think most of us who have built a pipe and tobacco “collection“ after a few decades have a dealer or two we trust to be fair with our heirs. I plan on giving those names to my executor and telling him who to contact to obtain a quote to purchase the lot, less any my two adult sons and son-in-law may want to keep as a momento. Selling hundreds of pipes on eBay is just too arduous to ask. Perhaps a table at the Columbus show would be a good way to offload my tobacco cellar,

Also, like many of us, I have artisan (J Alan, Tom Eltang, Adam Davidson, etc.) and high grade “factory” (Castello, Ser Jacopo etc.) pipes in my case that are unsmoked that I just like to look at on occasion. I hope I break down and smoke a few bowls from each eventually. Sure, an estate pipe that has been smoked is worth much less (60 cents on the dollar?) than an unsmoked pipe. But every time I see a non-smoking great nephew selling his uncle’s “unsmoked” pipes on eBay for a few extra bucks, I admit I feel sorry for the decedent’s lost experience.
 
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ClinchKnot

Might Stick Around
Jul 3, 2023
80
417
Virginia
Best way to have a say in the destiny of your collection is to do something about it yourself while you still can. I’ve known two pipe smokers with world class collections whose wishes were completely ignored. One collection was trashed. The other was sold by a consignment company who did a real hack job with the listings.
 

Mike N

Lifer
Aug 3, 2023
1,097
7,171
Northern Panhandle of West Virginia
Best way to have a say in the destiny of your collection is to do something about it yourself while you still can. I’ve known two pipe smokers with world class collections whose wishes were completely ignored. One collection was trashed. The other was sold by a consignment company who did a real hack job with the listings.
Yet further evidence that while it is hard to control the actions of your loved ones when you’re above ground, it is nearly impossible to do so from six feet under. Best you can hope for is to raise ‘em up right and smoke ‘em now if you got them.
 

NookersTheCat

Part of the Furniture Now
Sep 10, 2020
746
3,686
NEPA
This is essentially the same dilemma I've run into with my antique firearms.
I definitely think there's just as many deluded collectors who think their collection is worth a Bill Gate's fortune as their are ones who think they're worthless... the truth, as with most things, is usually somewhere in between.
And with most collectibles, the value can be highly subjective based upon small variations in the piece as well as the amount of enthusiasm/delusion of the person you find to make a deal with.

I'm still relatively young at 32.. so while I hope/pray that one day I'll have children who are interested in my hobbies and happy to make my collections their own.. in the meantime my solution is to just make a simple hand written list with each item enumerated and a rough, conservative value estimate of each.

Along with simply explaining to the people in my life who'd be responsible (parents right now, perhaps my significant other one day if things keep going well) The idea that "These things are probably more valuable than you realize, so do not just sell them in a single lot to the first guy you can find with a few hundred/thousand bucks in hand"

But I definitely think the way to view most collectibles is as "a fun way to spend time while also leaving behind a nice bonus for family" rather than as a literal "nest egg"
 

Terry Lennox

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 11, 2021
686
3,362
Southern California
Do not underestimate your loved one's need for the easiest most painless option. They may just include pipes in a general estate sale. Tobacco is even harder to deal with, and many pipers overestimate what their tins are worth (minus fees and shipping etc). Best to deal with it yourself, before it becomes an issue. Raise the cash for yourself, and just keep a few smokers for the end by your bedside. Try to be realistic and practical.
 

cosmicfolklore

Moderator
Staff member
Aug 9, 2013
36,455
89,207
Between the Heart of Alabama and Hot Springs NC
My mother threw away eight sets of my granddad's golf clubs when he passed, and he was a semi-pro golfer. And, she gave away his golf cart. Making money off of the dead or cashing in on their belongings just isn't a part of the way my family does things. When my dad passed I was left with his land, and I already had inherited land, so I just gave it to other family members who needed it. We aren't a greedy bunch.
I've seen way more families turn into evil greed monsters that would not let go of a single inch till real estate held up in courts just collapsed with neglect.

My family can have whatever they want, and have instructions to just do away with whatever's left. The more we give away, the more that comes back to us in times of need. Faith in the good father is more powerful than trying to nickel and dime your way through this land.
YMMV