Thanks for posting that.I have three Gourd Calabash pipes easily accessible for some pics.
William Harrison (Birmingham silversmith) with a silver rim cap and ferrule, with a horn stem from 1909:
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FDUPH (hallmarked silver bowl rim, Birmingham, 1909) with a silver band on the shank by W.H. Carrington (hallmarked Chester, 1909):
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Kaywoodie (four hole stinger), circa 1940s:
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The first two pipes are relatively small (they measure about six inches on the diagonal); because of the period they’re from, they both have orific bits and have somewhat small draught holes, typical of the period; the Kaywoodie has a large chamber, but the stinger narrows the draw—the draw feels rather restricted on all three pipes, especially the Kaywoodie—you would probably get a much more open draw with a 9mm filter pipe without a filter.
Here are all three next to each other with a Savinelli Series III 320 KS to get a sense of relative size:
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I had been pondering the same question myself, poring over calabash porn on eBay and contemplating a purchase. I think one would have to build a smoking-room for it first, replete with oriental rugs and cushions to lounge on, attired in one's smoking cap and jacket.I just couldn't see myself rocking one of those pipes!
I smoke mine lying on the sofa in my tracksuit bottoms and wife beater. It's a mood.I had been pondering the same question myself, poring over calabash porn on eBay and contemplating a purchase. I think one would have to build a smoking-room for it first, replete with oriental rugs and cushions to lounge on, attired in one's smoking cap and jacket.
Thank you for posting that example.Couple of pipes for comparison.
The top pipe is a Group 4 Dunhill
The gourd chamber is conical, and quite small.
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As a Sherlock Holmes fan, it is my duty to inform you that the calabash pipe was never used in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's stories. Its first portrayal in this context, which has since of course become iconic, was by William Gillette in the four-act play co-authored by Conan Doyle and Gillette, called (unsurprisingly) 'Sherlock Holmes', first staged in 1899. Gillette found it easiest to smoke and speak simultaneously on stage - as the directions required - with a calabash and, like the deerstalker cap (also popularised by Gillette), the image stuck. The Holmes in Doyle's stories is described variously as smoking a clay, a briar, and a cherrywood. He may, however, have used the *victim's* calabash to catch his dying words...I suspect that Holmes used his as an ear-trumpet too, to catch a dying victim's last words.
I bought this in the late 1970s-early 1980sThank you for posting that example.
That’s such a lovely Calabash and I had hoped the size would be significant but not unwieldy and it looks to be perfectly sized.
It really is a nicely executed example and if it smokes as good as it looks has to be a blast to have in your collection.