Hand made, high grade, pipesmith, pipe maker, pipe carver, craftsmen, or artisan?

Log in

SmokingPipes.com Updates

Watch for Updates Twice a Week

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

Mar 2, 2021
3,473
14,253
Alabama USA
I always liked "maker", but if someone choses artistan and I am interested, I will look. I am fairly visually influenced and can tell immediately if interested. Price, of course ,needs to be justifiable. It's important to consider how the thing feels. Most "artistian" pipe are too much for me, but thats why they make vanilla and chocolate.
 

jpmcwjr

Lifer
May 12, 2015
26,263
30,341
Carmel Valley, CA
Pipers usually buy a full set of pipes. Typically, they would run $800US and up depends on the ornamentation. Full silver mounted set could easily go well over $7000US. Those are sets of Great Highland Bagpipes. Uilleann pipes, on the other hand, usually purchased in steps. That's Irish for you.

Those who make these pipes are craftsman. Silversmiths are silversmiths.

Smoking pipes are made by completely different group of craftsmen.
Pipers originated in Scotland and Ireland, perhaps Wales as well. Now there are pipers everywhere, mostly wearing a Stuart plaid.
 

anotherbob

Lifer
Mar 30, 2019
16,825
31,562
46
In the semi-rural NorthEastern USA

Sonorisis

Part of the Furniture Now
Dec 24, 2019
855
4,587
There's two kinds of pipes: The ones that were made by the person who's name is on the pipe, and the others.
 

karam

Lifer
Feb 2, 2019
2,600
9,923
Basel, Switzerland
There's two kinds of pipes: The ones that were made by the person who's name is on the pipe, and the others.
Just to pull our collective legs: there was a Mr Charles Peterson, Achille Savinelli, and Alfred Dunhill once upon a time. Maybe there wasn’t a Mr White Dot ;)

Of course there were a Mr Ford, Citroen, Bugatti, Benz, Bosch etc etc etc too

I call them carvers.
 

mso489

Lifer
Feb 21, 2013
41,211
60,636
If artisan means someone who carves and finishes pipes by hand and machine at a workbench, I think it is a useful word. It seems all pipes are handmade to a considerable degree, using some machines usually. I can't forget the people with artisan skills who work on the factory line. Whoever used to make the Dr. Grabow Royalton bent bulldogs was certainly an artist, and now he or she is apparently retired, departed from life, or gone into business for themselves. But a person working alone making pipes is certainly an artisan, even if they have the help of an apprentice, I think.
 

Bobby Bailey

Starting to Get Obsessed
Aug 8, 2021
203
349
69
Upper Southwest Arkansas, USA
I much dislike the term "artisan". It is wildly overused.

I'm a Gunsmith, I do repairs and build some custom rifles. Craftsman fits very well,
I have a good friend that restores high five-figure and low six-figure English shotguns. He is an artist in what he does. I was once visiting him when a customer flew in from Germany to pick up a restored English 12 bore. The man raved about my friend being a "true artisan".
My friend replied, " Artisan, fartisan. I'm a craftsman and I do the work of a craftsman".

I think my friend said it well.
 
Everything mass produced has design as an element.

When a maker inserts some of their own aesthetics into a design, it definitely elevates the object above that of a tool.

The difference is in duplication. A table full of pipes all identical lets us know the differences without having to go into the factory/studio to see how their made.

I mean, most of us can tell the difference between a poster and a painting.

Some makers may be more akin to a craftsman, making really good tools (pipes), then there are mass produced pipes, but there are definitely artists out there making pipes also.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Toast

saintpeter

Lifer
May 20, 2017
1,158
2,636
I use the vaguely similar terms of metal working. A blacksmith makes something from start to finish. A whitesmith adds on to something already made. Sadly it is next to impossible to get an agreement among pipe smokers on terminology. Hell, we can't even all agree on shapes or the fact that Carter Hall is the best tobacco ever made.
 

didimauw

Moderator
Staff member
Jul 28, 2013
10,727
37,706
SE WI
I use the vaguely similar terms of metal working. A blacksmith makes something from start to finish. A whitesmith adds on to something already made. Sadly it is next to impossible to get an agreement among pipe smokers on terminology. Hell, we can't even all agree on shapes or the fact that Carter Hall is the best tobacco ever made.
Nah, people just won't admit it about the Carter Hall. But yet it's hard to find sometimes......people be buying that shit up like it's Christmas some days.....
 
  • Love
Reactions: saintpeter
I use the vaguely similar terms of metal working. A blacksmith makes something from start to finish. A whitesmith adds on to something already made. Sadly it is next to impossible to get an agreement among pipe smokers on terminology. Hell, we can't even all agree on shapes or the fact that Carter Hall is the best tobacco ever made.
I've never heard the term "whitesmith," but to muddy it more, a goldsmith is anyone who makes jewelry with any metal. A silversmith is one who makes tableware or other functional items in any metal. And, a coppersmith makes cookware, even if it is stainless. But, since I feel a bit pretentious calling myself a goldsmith, even if I do use gold, I just use the term metalsmith, because I do make a lot of silver jewelry. But mostly I use the term "jewelry artist," since most of my work has a story behind it, and I feel like "artist" is less pretentious. But, I guess it depends on your background as to whether "artist," "artisan," or "artesian" sounds pretentious. If someone hates art or doesn't understand it, then... YMMV puffy
 
  • Love
Reactions: saintpeter

saintpeter

Lifer
May 20, 2017
1,158
2,636
I've never heard the term "whitesmith," but to muddy it more, a goldsmith is anyone who makes jewelry with any metal. A silversmith is one who makes tableware or other functional items in any metal. And, a coppersmith makes cookware, even if it is stainless. But, since I feel a bit pretentious calling myself a goldsmith, even if I do use gold, I just use the term metalsmith, because I do make a lot of silver jewelry. But mostly I use the term "jewelry artist," since most of my work has a story behind it, and I feel like "artist" is less pretentious. But, I guess it depends on your background as to whether "artist," "artisan," or "artesian" sounds pretentious. If someone hates art or doesn't understand it, then... YMMV puffy
Not a term in use anymore, but then being my age, I was born way before the internet. I like the term artist.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cosmicfolklore

pipestud

Lifer
Dec 6, 2012
2,012
1,771
Robinson, TX.
Thinking on it, I generally refer to the carvers as carvers, and the pipes as either artisan made or factory made. I almost never use the term "handmade" since there's quite a bit of machining involved with any pipe and the term is misleading. I'll use the term hand carved for stems shaped from rod stock, or for some pipes that have carving on them, like quaints. Sometimes I'll use the term hand shaped as that seems more accurate than handmade.
What sablebrush52 said.
 

cramptholomew

Lurker
Jun 6, 2018
32
136
Maryland
www.instagram.com
There is a lot of hand work that goes into any pipe. Stems, sanding, heck - I usually eschew my Foredom for hand files 99% of the time. I use machines for drilling, some turning (amount is relative to the shape I’m making), rough shaping, blasting, and buffing. I’d say, though, time-wise, the machine related part is probably 25% of the time spent with one pipe - for me.

Regarding “artisan”, etc., I think that word is used now to denote a product made by an individual from scratch, who has some some degree of chops to make something admirable. Has it lost its pedigree? Perhaps. “Virtuoso” would define someone so adept at their craft, as to be unparalleled. There is room for all those adjectives and nomenclatures among pipe makers as a whole, including “craftsman”. I generally use the term, “pipe maker”, because that’s what they do, and there is a degree of humility to the craft.
 

Windknot

Lurker
Nov 4, 2021
36
105
Corpus Christi, Texas
I'm no artisan, but I did make this one out of pipestone I ordered from a guy in Pipestone, MN. First attempt at carving out of stone and making the pipe stem. I guess I've watched Dances with Wolves one too many times.
 

Attachments

  • P1.jpg
    P1.jpg
    101.2 KB · Views: 1
  • IMG_20210415_191832639.jpg
    IMG_20210415_191832639.jpg
    137.1 KB · Views: 1
  • P4.jpg
    P4.jpg
    189.4 KB · Views: 1
  • P8.jpg
    P8.jpg
    123.5 KB · Views: 1
  • p10.jpg
    p10.jpg
    108.6 KB · Views: 1
  • Like
Reactions: North Pole piper

wayneteipen

Can't Leave
May 7, 2012
473
222
Oddly enough, this topic was once debated on pipemakersforum.com several years ago. I think the consensus boiled down to the terms "craftsman" and "artisan." With craftsman describing one who crafts a pipe from scratch and artisan describing one who creates art. I suppose it depends on how creative the pipe is. I can say I've made more traditional shaped pipes that I don't consider all that artistic since art tends to describe making something new and unique. I've also made a handful of pipes that I would consider more artistic. For me, though, I've always been perfectly content with the term pipemaker.
 

wayneteipen

Can't Leave
May 7, 2012
473
222
"Carver", on the other hand, makes the least sense to me since there really isn't a lot of actual wood carving involved in making a pipe depending on your definition of the word "carve." It's by no means offensive though.