This thread is intended to be part nostalgic ramble, part pipe-review and partly a bunch of pipe pictures because, who doesn’t like looking at pipe pictures?
I’ve posted previously that most of my small pipe collection came from my dad. He was a typical blue-collar pipe man of his day (1921-2010) with a variety of drug store brands that include Kaywoodie (his favorites), Medico, Yorkshire (a Sears brand) and at least one Dr. Grabow. Unfortunately, I never got to smoke his Grabow. While cleaning out his old house after he passed away, I found the stummel of a Savoy in what I believe was shape #65, probably from the late 1950s. My age estimate is based on where it was found and what was with it as much as the pipe itself. It was a slightly open Dublin with an oval shank with stamping on the top (“Savoy” over “Dr. Grabow”) and bottom (“Imported Briar”). It was covered in splatters of no less than two types of paint and had a chunk of the stem with the stinger broken off in it. Dad obviously used it a lot until the stem broke. It looked so bad I almost threw it out, but it had a nice shape and one not already in dad’s collection, so I decided to sand off the paint. Underneath the paint was a thick, maroon-tinted finish that came off easily enough, revealing some attractive straight grained burl. After polishing it up I decided it was too nice to toss so I mailed it off to a pipe shop to have a ¼ bent replacement stem fitted. I was glad dad didn’t throw it away and neither did I. Unfortunately, the US Postal Service managed to do what dad and I did not: They lost it. Below are the only pictures I have of dad’s old Dr. Grabow: The stummel before I mailed it off to the USPS black hole, and the old tenon and stinger I removed from the shank prior to the clean-up. I would have dearly liked to have smoked it.
I’ve posted previously that most of my small pipe collection came from my dad. He was a typical blue-collar pipe man of his day (1921-2010) with a variety of drug store brands that include Kaywoodie (his favorites), Medico, Yorkshire (a Sears brand) and at least one Dr. Grabow. Unfortunately, I never got to smoke his Grabow. While cleaning out his old house after he passed away, I found the stummel of a Savoy in what I believe was shape #65, probably from the late 1950s. My age estimate is based on where it was found and what was with it as much as the pipe itself. It was a slightly open Dublin with an oval shank with stamping on the top (“Savoy” over “Dr. Grabow”) and bottom (“Imported Briar”). It was covered in splatters of no less than two types of paint and had a chunk of the stem with the stinger broken off in it. Dad obviously used it a lot until the stem broke. It looked so bad I almost threw it out, but it had a nice shape and one not already in dad’s collection, so I decided to sand off the paint. Underneath the paint was a thick, maroon-tinted finish that came off easily enough, revealing some attractive straight grained burl. After polishing it up I decided it was too nice to toss so I mailed it off to a pipe shop to have a ¼ bent replacement stem fitted. I was glad dad didn’t throw it away and neither did I. Unfortunately, the US Postal Service managed to do what dad and I did not: They lost it. Below are the only pictures I have of dad’s old Dr. Grabow: The stummel before I mailed it off to the USPS black hole, and the old tenon and stinger I removed from the shank prior to the clean-up. I would have dearly liked to have smoked it.