Chasing Grain

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Sigmund

Lifer
Sep 17, 2023
4,375
45,627
France
@OzPiper Is that olive pipe a contrast stain...its way more intersting that most olive wood pipes Ive seen. Im guessing the contrast application makes it look spalted.
 
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Briar Lee

Lifer
Sep 4, 2021
6,958
23,516
Humansville Missouri
View attachment 391898it‘s not everyon’s bag of tea, but I miss the Danish Freestyle pipes of the 70s-80’s when chasing grain was all the rage. The integration of a smooth grain finish and plateau were to my eye simply beautiful. The fancy stems and the use of curves that followed the grain was something that appealed to me.

Do you miss this style?

In theory the freehand Danish style produced the best smokers.

Those enormous plateaux briar cuts had to be centuries old, to be that size. They only used the straight grain portion, the best kind for smoking. Chambers were huge and surrounded by the maximum possible thickness of briar.

Bob Marx claimed credit for first selling lots of freehands.

IMG_1056.jpeg

Artisans like the late Ted Laird still keep the faith.

IMG_1057.jpeg

But of them all Preben Holm was likely the master.

Ben Wade

IMG_1058.jpeg
 

OzPiper

Lifer
Nov 30, 2020
8,075
46,303
73
Sydney, Australia
@OzPiper Is that olive pipe a contrast stain...its way more intersting that most olive wood pipes Ive seen. Im guessing the contrast application makes it look spalted.
I’m not sure, but I think it’s just waxed.
It has seen less than a dozen smokes, and has started to darken noticeably

The background is another piece of olive wood for comparison
 

Briar Lee

Lifer
Sep 4, 2021
6,958
23,516
Humansville Missouri
Unless noted in the nomenclature, it's unlikely Preben made that one. He had many carvers in his workshop such as Poul Winslow.

I didn’t know a freehand Ben Wade Preben Holm was signed by Preben Holm.

He’s sort of the Lefty Frizzell of Danish pipe makers. The others are master Preben Holm imitators, which is a supreme complement.:)

Merle Haggard sometimes did a better Lefty song than Lefty.


How do we know which ones Preben himself carved? What was his mark?
 
Last edited:

sasquatch

Lifer
Jul 16, 2012
1,726
3,088
20250503_105352.jpg

you want to see the good side TOO? Jeez your fussy George.


For reference, this is a block I've held for ten years or so, one picked out of a bag of 100 XX quality plateau. If there's a XXX it looks like this. And this one had the unusual non-volcano shaped grain, more of a fist, so a ballish pipe was going to be great.
 

bayareabriar

Lifer
May 8, 2019
1,175
1,956
View attachment 394875

you want to see the good side TOO? Jeez your fussy George.


For reference, this is a block I've held for ten years or so, one picked out of a bag of 100 XX quality plateau. If there's a XXX it looks like this. And this one had the unusual non-volcano shaped grain, more of a fist, so a ballish pipe was going to be great.
Have an example of the block pre-cut? I see what you mean with the grain rounding in, so that is why you went ballish shape? I’m curious what that looks like to your eye when you had the block. Or if it was “upside down” and cut, would it not round in, or is that not doable? Know very little about the beginning process.
 

sasquatch

Lifer
Jul 16, 2012
1,726
3,088
So a "plain jane" briar block is boring, you can't pull a masterpiece of grain out of this, because it isn't "grainful".

20250527_212702.jpg

That looks like it'll make a decent pipe, it's not showing cracks or pepperspots, it's nice clean wood, but not exciting, not "high grade" wood really, save that it looks like a good "quality" piece.

A better piece shows more promise, more obvious grain and more consistent (and on both sides of the block, it's good wood, well cut).

1000002975.jpg


So that's a X or maybe XX grade piece, with some care a pretty flashy pipe will come out of that. And it's quite radial, very straight lines coming from some imagined central point in the plant.

Digging around, here's another block of similar or slightly better grain quality maybe, but the SHAPE of the grain is different, a big curl up the front of the block:

20250527_212459.jpg
So to lay out a pipe on both of these, the natural "straight grain (eg grain following shape) is going to be a dublin or if used upside down a volcano sort of shape on the right, but the left block, that's got some belge or apple thing going on, and this is the kind of block that crazy stripey thing came out of.

1000002977.jpg
 

sasquatch

Lifer
Jul 16, 2012
1,726
3,088
So if you go back through this thread, there's pipes that have crazy good briar used with crazy good skill, there's pipes with crazy good briar used with much less skill, and there's pipes with reasonably good briar used with crazy good skill, and pipes with reasonably good briar used with much less skill. That perfect matching of shape and grain is what high-grade pipes are all about, but that's very much a razor edge, most blocks just aren't capable of producing the best pipe anyone's ever seen.

20220904_104222.jpg

When the wood speaks, you listen.

But it doesn't always speak.
 

bayareabriar

Lifer
May 8, 2019
1,175
1,956
So if you go back through this thread, there's pipes that have crazy good briar used with crazy good skill, there's pipes with crazy good briar used with much less skill, and there's pipes with reasonably good briar used with crazy good skill, and pipes with reasonably good briar used with much less skill. That perfect matching of shape and grain is what high-grade pipes are all about, but that's very much a razor edge, most blocks just aren't capable of producing the best pipe anyone's ever seen.

View attachment 394922

When the wood speaks, you listen.

But it doesn't always speak.
Thank you for sharing!