Bamboo Pipes Seem To Be All the Rage

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Mike N

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 3, 2023
527
2,977
Northern Panhandle of West Virginia
Not too long ago, my perception of bamboo was that it was used to fix a defect a maker found in a briar stem. Now it seems to be all the rage by top artisan pipe makers on instagram. It’s a bit tricky to master. Here are 6 handmade bamboo pipes. Please post any in your collection.

Clockwise from top left in photo below:
1. Adam Davidson-US
2. Tom Eltang-Denmark
3. Dirk Heinemann- Germany
4. Jason Patrick-US
5. Dirk Heinemann-Germany
6. Henri Soerensen - Denmark

(Tamper made by T. Beaumont- US)
 

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Mike N

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 3, 2023
527
2,977
Northern Panhandle of West Virginia
Not too long ago, my perception of bamboo was that it was used to fix a defect a maker found in a briar stem. Now it seems to be all the rage by top artisan pipe makers on instagram. It’s a bit tricky to master. Here are 6 handmade bamboo pipes. Please post any in your collection.

Clockwise from top left in photo below:
1. Adam Davidson-US
2. Tom Eltang-Denmark
3. Dirk Heinemann- Germany
4. Jason Patrick-US
5. Dirk Heinemann-Germany
6. Henri Soerensen - Denmark

(Tamper made by T. Beaumont- US)
lol that should obviously read “counter -clockwise” from top left for names. Oops.
 
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mingc

Lifer
Jun 20, 2019
4,257
12,599
The Big Rock Candy Mountains
I assume Dunhill started the trend with its Whangee pipes, supposedly introduced during WWII to save briar, but I don't didn't really see how it does;
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My own collection, a Stanwell and a KJ Pipe:
20230530_203351-jpg.225093

20200829_172313-jpg.41278

Also a Kai Neilsen and a Tsuge churchwarden:
20230614_222441.jpg
20200516_115613.jpg
 
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Mike N

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 3, 2023
527
2,977
Northern Panhandle of West Virginia
Here is a second group of nine bamboo pipes from my collection of various artisans.

(L-R) J. Alan (US); Jason Patrick (US); Nate King (US); Jason Patrick (US) ; J.Alan (US); Adam Davidson (US); Adam Davidson (US); Mike Sebastian Bay (Denmark); and Nathan Armentrout (US).

(click on image to enlarge)
 

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BrightDarkEyes

Can't Leave
Mar 16, 2024
477
6,781
Shuswap, British Columbia
I assume Dunhill started the trend with its Whangee pipes, supposedly introduced during WWII to save briar, but I don't didn't really see how it does;

I don’t think Dunhill was the first to use bamboo shanks but my understanding as well is that they were used due to the scarcity of briar. It turned a little bowl into a proper length billiard or lovat, etc. I would assume from the look of some old Dunhill W60 Whangees that this is true. I like those ones because it is almost only the bowl being briar with the tiniest bit sticking out for the bamboo shank to fit into.
45B6A7FA-8747-4AF0-AB40-8A9C31A17FC6.jpeg

I dont care for the look, and I think of it as one more place the pipe could break.
188A0C9F-60F8-4B57-B202-CCDFECA9785E.jpeg
I would be more worried about the briar or stem breaking than the bamboo.

Tomorrow I’ll post a picture of my bamboo shanked pipes.