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drezz01

Can't Leave
Dec 1, 2014
483
6
My god fnord and sablebrush52 thank you very much for the thoughtful response and the lesson. The pipedia article is a great read as well! I can certainly appreciate the Barling family's focus on quality above all else and it is a shame to hear (like most things) this has been somewhat diminished after the Finlay acquisition in an attempt to increase margins. It kills me actually - as an architect I have seen more than enough noble projects 'value engineered' beyond the point of mediocrity. I can certainly see why family-era Barling's can command a high price.
I think we connote value to 'old things' not just in vanity, but because they have survived the rigors of time; they were produced to a level of quality that not only allowed them to endure, but also endeared them to a steward who found enough value in them that they took it upon themselves to take care of the object. I can definitely see how collectors would find value in contributing to that legacy and to keep it alive. I'm sure there is a whole digression about the loss of care and craft in our 'consumption society' - but I'll let that sleeping dog lie. I'm still aglow with the idea of these pipe makers taking extreme care to produce a product to be cherished and that some of these little smoking devices are still providing happiness (or in my case, learning, joy, inspiration, wonderment - what have you) to us today. It's pretty cool how the determined effort of individuals all that time ago have spun off and compounded over time - creating a bit of a legend, if that's not too verbose.
Thanks very much for the insight and the story!

 
May 31, 2012
4,295
41
Great post Sable!

:clap:

:!:

:

:
I think we connote value to 'old things' not just in vanity, but because they have survived the rigors of time; they were produced to a level of quality that not only allowed them to endure, but also endeared them to a steward who found enough value in them that they took it upon themselves to take care of the object. I can definitely see how collectors would find value in contributing to that legacy and to keep it alive. I'm sure there is a whole digression about the loss of care and craft in our 'consumption society' - but I'll let that sleeping dog lie. I'm still aglow with the idea of these pipe makers taking extreme care to produce a product to be cherished and that some of these little smoking devices are still providing happiness (or in my case, learning, joy, inspiration, wonderment - what have you) to us today. It's pretty cool how the determined effort of individuals all that time ago have spun off and compounded over time - creating a bit of a legend, if that's not too verbose.

Very well said Drezz, and I agree.

The same goes for old famed British tobacco,

tins of 3 Nuns and Balkan Sobranie sell for extraordinary sums.
sidenote,

as an architect, you may appreciate the work of Chris Asteriou,

he's an architect from Greece who started making pipes.

In this interview, you can also see just how seriously English pipe collectors regarding shapes and other such aesthetic crriteria,

it's a good read:

http://cakeanddottle.com/pipe-rack/interviews/3-interview-chris-asteriou
:puffy:

 

ssjones

Moderator
Staff member
May 11, 2011
20,073
15,870
Covington, Louisiana
postimg.cc
Car enthusiasts are always looking for the "Cobra in a Barn" and pipe enthusiasts are searching for the briar equivalent.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Cobra-Barn-Automotive-Archaeology/dp/076033661X

This is a pretty amazing story, the Ferrari alone could be worth over $14 million.

http://www.businessinsider.com.au/18-million-cars-in-french-barn-2014-12

 
May 31, 2012
4,295
41
Car enthusiasts are always looking for the "Cobra in a Barn" and pipe enthusiasts are searching for the briar equivalent.
So true Al.
I regret not buying a sweet Citroen DS when I found one "in a barn",

so too goes quite a few pipes.
Most of all I regret not buying a 1968 Alfa Romeo GTV complete with GTAM flares for incredibly cheap when I had the fleeting chance.
Pipes are the same way.
You never forget the ones that get away.
They haunt your dreams.
:!:
70-etcc@brno-toine-hezemans-alfa-romeo-2000-gtam.jpg


 
May 31, 2012
4,295
41
Spitfires for the win!
Z3bFAbV.jpg

Although, I've always been partial to the Corsair cuz I grew up lookinn' at Baa Baa Black Sheep,

but that's offtopic cuz it wuz in the Pacific mostly.
Remember that Robert Conrad battery commercial?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUSnEmgNvNM

 
May 31, 2012
4,295
41
Thinking through in this fashion, weighing the options...I must be getting older.
:lol:

LOL
I'm old people too!
Just didda search for "bodacious british barling beauties",

no results found.
Just my luck.

:|

 

pruss

Lifer
Feb 6, 2013
3,565
373
Mytown
@MLC & Trailboss
I loved the Spitfire, and liked the P51... But my favourite "Model of the Month" club from Snap Tight when I was a kid was the Mosquito!

http://www.aviation-history.com/dehavilland/mosquito.html
-- Pat

 

ssjones

Moderator
Staff member
May 11, 2011
20,073
15,870
Covington, Louisiana
postimg.cc
Those bodacious Brits are on Page 3 in The Star, right?
My brother and I were in The London Daily Mirror in the early 70's, which also featured nude shots. We were on vacation with my parents in Zurich. My mother insisted my brother and I wear traditional German lederhosen where ever we went. We hated it of course. A photographer asked to take our picture in front of a Swiss bank. My parents agreed and it was to go in an advertisement the Mirror. My father bought the issue, but wouldn't let us see the paper....I always wondered what happened to that issue.

 
May 31, 2012
4,295
41
My brother and I were in The London Daily Mirror in the early 70's, which also featured nude shots. We were on vacation with my parents in Zurich. My mother insisted my brother and I wear traditional German lederhosen where ever we went. We hated it of course. A photographer asked to take our picture in front of a Swiss bank. My parents agreed and it was to go in an advertisement the Mirror. My father bought the issue, but wouldn't let us see the paper....I always wondered what happened to that issue.
:D

Must.See.Photographs.
:lol:

 
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