So, I take it you're not a fan of Jackson Pollock??Meanwhile, Jackson Pollock's "Number 19, 1948" looks like a hobo puked on a house painter's drop cloth, and sold for $58.4 million. Probably because the first schmuck who bought a Pollock piece paid way too much for it, and then doubled down on the avant-garde bullshit spiel instead of admitting he got taken for a ride by a drunken, no-talent hack.
from: https://www.invaluable.com/blog/andy-warhol-biography/Andy Warhol deeply impacted the course of art history, as well as American culture, both for Americans themselves and the international community at large. He brought the concept of consumerism to the foreground and further popularized the use of art as a reflection of society, but also as social commentary. When you look at art from different eras, you get a unique insight into the people of the time. Warhol showed us the darker side of the post-war economic boom and allowed viewers to question values, high art, and beauty.
The irony is rich, as we go on about aged tins of tobacco. But I like seasoned wine and tobacco, so what do I know. I also like Jackson Pollock.... :DI also hate pretentious douches who drink wine and pretend they know about hidden flavors.
Great point, you really do have to handle these kind of pipes in person, to appreciate the nuances that separate them from factory-grade pipes. A pipe club is also a great way to experience high end pipes. At the Philly club, there's always a few guys with some uber-high grade pipes. I dont get there often these days, but I never pass up the opportunity to check out a high grade when invited.Go to a pipe show, see the pipes, learn what makes a pipe adequate, good, or great, from an aesthetic and technical point of view.
At the West Coast Show Briarworks had a dozen or so of their briar calabashes on their table. I noted to Pete that I was wondering if they had dissolved the line, because I hadn't seen them anywhere in quite some time. Pete stated that in fact they hadn't made any in quite some time, because they're so hard to make. You have to have a sizable block of briar suitable for it. On top of that it's a rather time consuming process to make them, so BW has been mostly focusing on other lines lately instead. He did say they were working on some to send to SmokingPipes, the full calabash and some more just the bowls in different finishes.To the OP.... the calabash in question is a multi-part pipe, including a magnetically seated insert bowl. Quite a bit more work to make than a regular pipe. Therefore more expensive.
To make a one-off version takes more time, more skill, most likely more expensive materials, and add whatever "name tax" you want for whatever maker it is.
It's beyond me why so many people got so offended by his rant. It was surely strongly worded and maybe I wouldn't have expressed myself in that exact manner, but it ressonated a lot with me and I'm not a pipemaker. He didn't say every pipe that wasn't carved by him a turd, he called every lazily made pipe "with lots of attitude and no skill" turds.I wonder if TJ ever survived after commenting that other pipemakers carve "turds." Or something of that nature.