Can You Feel the Grain on an Old Briar?

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Sonorisis

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 24, 2019
855
4,530
Wood grows faster in Summer time than in the Winter. Therefore, Winter wood is denser. When you dry the wood -- or age the wood -- the Summer parts of the growth rings shrink more than the Winter parts. So, what you're seeing is the Summer wood sunken below the Winter part of the growth rings.
 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,211
59,143
This is rare. I'd guess it is a smooth finish that was put over an insufficiently seasoned briar. It still looks sound enough, so if it smokes well, it is an interesting oddity. I don't think I'd attempt to sand it down and refinish it, it is more of a conversation piece this way, if it smokes.
 
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anotherbob

Lifer
Mar 30, 2019
18,350
33,350
47
Central PA a.k.a. State College
Yeah I have a smooth pipe that the grain stands out like that from the previous owner being to heavy handed with a buffer.
I have to admit it reminds me of some wood floors I've seen that have either had things dragged over them for decades or have been aggressively buffed using a more aggressive pad then should have been used. Has that weird wrinkly look.
 
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jpmcwjr

Lifer
May 12, 2015
26,265
29,177
Carmel Valley, CA

I reworded title, not seeing it had already been shortened and corrected for caps. Here's what's been taken out:

" I thought smooth pipes were sanded at production—do they shrink with age?"​