Famous Owner (Jack Lemmon) Dunhill Brought Back to New

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RufusTFirefly

Lurker
Jun 27, 2024
2
26
I'm more of rare pipe guy. I love Dunhills and Ser Jacopo pipes. I have a bunch very limited edition pipes from both. I also have a love of BBB's they're the best bang for the buck pipe out there. As long as they're pre-cadogan era. I've got a couple turn of the century calabash pipes that I will never part with. As far as Dunhill goes I own several 80s Christmas pipes in their leather books, several RTDA Show pipes, a couple DR's, 4 HT collector's and a bunch of pre 1970 pipes. I prefer the oil cured Dunhills. For Ser Jacopo I have all the gem series pipes except for a Diamante that one is elusive. I do have the rarest of the rare lord of the rings series. I've got 2 Bilbo's, 2 Frodo's and as of today ( thanks ebay) 2 Gandalfs. I only need the horn of gondor. Unfortunately that never went into production so I may never see that one. Only 2 or 3 were ever made. The rest is artisan pipes I love functional art. I'm including some pictures. I also collect dunhill accessories. I've got some really rare one off versions. I forgot my affinity for metal gadget pipes they're in the pictures.
 

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sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,055
46,403
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Beautiful collection! We share a few common collector interests. I enjoy Britwood, though my focus has been Barling, with examples ranging from the 1880’s through 1962, Sasieni, BBB, Leeds era Ben Wades, Comoys, and a few Dunhills, including one that belonged to Alfred Hitchcock, then American Artisan pipes from a handful of artists that appeal to me, and a smattering of odds and ends.
 

georged

Lifer
Mar 7, 2013
5,661
14,838
An interesting postscript ---

In 50 years of PipeWorlding, I'd only seen two of this shape before this one. And within 48 hours of finishing work on it, another appeared sold on Chance Whitamore's site:

Screen Shot 2024-06-28 at 8.24.57 PM.png


Why are they so rare?

Since Dunhill has always priced by group size and finish, they fill production in direct proportion to the difficulty of making a particular shape. Harder = fewer made. (Think CK)

The reason? The the simplest explanation would be because the profit margin is lower on the time-consuming stuff.

In this case, the gotcha would be the almost-twice-as wide-as-it-is-tall oval shank. After frazing there is still a lot of hand work required for the stummel, and the stem is a proper pig to get right. (And it must be right, or the entire look is spoiled. Flow is everything.)

In short, both the shop carvers and the cost accountants hate 'em.

Which makes owning one that much more fun, of course.puffy