Are there rhinestone holes on the other side, too?I found this in an antique shop for $9 and had to have it just because of its funkiness. It’s a Kaywoodie Lady Briar from the ‘50s or ‘60s and has never been smoked. The plan is replace the missing rhinestones and put it in a shadow box or some such display.
View attachment 350651
Yes, there are three sets of four rhinestones. The plan is to replace them all. A few are missing and the ones that are still intact are pretty beat up. They almost look melted.Are there rhinestone holes on the other side, too?
I found this in an antique shop for $9 and had to have it just because of its funkiness. It’s a Kaywoodie Lady Briar from the ‘50s or ‘60s and has never been smoked. The plan is replace the missing rhinestones and put it in a shadow box or some such display.
View attachment 350651
I think we had this conversation before. I found the pointed versions the other day. Between $1.00-$2.00 for 10. $20 to ship! I’ll keep looking and keep the doubled up flats in mind! Thanks!It will be difficult to find rhinestones with pointed backs like the original. On my Kaywoodie Lady, I had to use new, flat back rhinestones and stack two in each hole missing an original. I have red and clear if you need those colours.
I think we had this conversation before. I found the pointed versions the other day. Between $1.00-$2.00 for 10. $20 to ship! I’ll keep looking and keep the doubled up flats in mind! Thanks!
I saw them on Etsy. Can’t find the link at the moment but I found a place that allowed you to buy as little as 10 of any one color of cubic zirconia. It was about $8 total for four lots of 10 but the shipping was around $5 per lot! I’m going to keep looking.Where did you find the pointed ones? I would consider redoing mine with the correct type.
- That's a really fine thing to have done, IMHO: framing them with photos and the note on the back of the frame. To give your posterity some interesting information about your father, their ancestor, and to put it in a wider historical context at the same time. Truly excellent.This was an interesting thread to read, thanks to the original poster for instigating the discussion. I too have a few pipes in my small collection I do not smoke, but have too much sentimental value to chuck. They all belonged to my dad and were purchased shortly after WW2. After I found them in his house, long after he died, I cleaned them up and smoked them but as you can see below, they’re far more complicated than regular two-piece briar pipes.
I found them too much trouble to clean and though they all smoke great, so do my regular two-piece briars. I decided to make a display of them which now hangs on the wall with all of our family pictures.
I even glued a note to the back in case I’m not around and some future family member wonders why they made it into a display piece.
Justification for another pipe purchase is totally unnecessaryI bought this uncommon Nørding grade 2 'Scandinavian Original' as a placebo, so I could smoke the 'Nørding Guinness World Record Pipe' vicariously. It's honestly the only way I could stop myself. I don't know as people would consider that a rational solution, but it's my work around.
View attachment 351484