Good thing what you say doesn't impact us in the leastWhen I started 22 years ago estate pipes where very frowned upon.
Bring those days back I say!
Good thing what you say doesn't impact us in the leastWhen I started 22 years ago estate pipes where very frowned upon.
Bring those days back I say!
Where? Some B&Ms sold restored ones at that time period and the market was huge on ebay.estate pipes were very frowned upon.
As is the argument against estate pipes.There is a legitimate argument to be made that many of the great designs in automotive and other manufactured items from the 1960s were inspired partially through psychedelics.
The market for estates was going strong over 30 years ago and nobody has any issue with it. Gus' Smoke Shop did a lively business in estates, especially from celebrities, like Alfred Hitchcock and William Conrad, from who's collections I bought several pipes in the early 90's.When I started 22 years ago estate pipes where very frowned upon.
Bring those days back I say!
Where? John Dengler did a thriving business with Estate Pipes back in the 70s - and this was in the midwest where everything seemed to be frowned upon. I do wish I could have gotten to Gus's.When I started 22 years ago estate pipes where very frowned upon.
Bring those days back I say!
I used to buy Estate Pipes at the time,Ebay was a feast where you could buy pipes for a third of what they cost today. but admittedly, fewer smokers were buying them. Tobacco shops were more common, and new pipes were more accessible.Where? Some B&Ms sold restored ones at that time period and the market was huge on ebay.
Where? John Dengler did a thriving business with Estate Pipes back in the 70s - and this was in the midwest where everything seemed to be frowned upon. I do wish I could have gotten to Gus's.
Never drink downstream from the herd.Did you know that water you made your coffee with was once dinosaur piss?
If you s..t in your pipes, you can keep them.This thread is too much fun, I’m back with a reason as to why estate pipes are both intriguing and gross.
Let’s say I find a used Armani suit that fits me like a glove. It’s only $50. However, the previous owner had the garlic sweats (anyone with an Italian Grandpop might understand) and crapped his pants every time he wore the suit. Like a thousand times. The suit has been sanitized. I might wear that suit, I might not, maybe I’d have to try it on.
Talk about ghosting.If you s..t in your pipes, you can keep them.
I'd never buy an Armani suit, shit or no shit.This thread is too much fun, I’m back with a reason as to why estate pipes are both intriguing and gross.
Let’s say I find a used Armani suit that fits me like a glove. It’s only $50. However, the previous owner had the garlic sweats (anyone with an Italian Grandpop might understand) and crapped his pants every time he wore the suit. Like a thousand times. The suit has been sanitized. I might wear that suit, I might not, maybe I’d have to try it on.
It is. The "estate" market really got going in the 1980's. It existed before then, but not to the same extent.My memory could be wrong of course.
It is. The "estate" market really got going in the 1980's. It existed before then, but not to the same extent.
I'm not understanding what you just posted. Are you saying that at one time estates averaged about 25% of the price of a new pipe, and that now they are 50%?It existed sure, but what I'm saying is that you could get an estate (making up percentages here) for 25% new and now it's 50%.
