Interesting Completed Ebay Auctions - British Pipes

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jaingorenard

Part of the Furniture Now
Apr 11, 2022
762
3,436
Norwich, UK
For a long while I've been after an "old" Charatan, something predating the more "modern" pipes of the '50s and, especially '60s onward and, to my mind, they are the absolute devil to date with any accuracy. Could anyone say with any certainty "this is a 1940s Charatan"? In any case, I finally came across an old Charatan with hallmarks and mention of vendor which helps to date it with reasonable accuracy and put up a bit of a fight for it. The nomenclature on the pipe reads "Charatan / London / Made" and, opposite that, "DAMMAN / MELBOURNE" (the likely seller). The hallmarks have an "FC" in oval, and Birminham date letters corresponding to 1917. The stem isn't quite flush with the shank, perhaps due to age-related shrinkage? The ad is from a 1921 "The Speculum", a newsletter for Melbourne (AUS) medical students.
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Excellent find!
 
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Reactions: greeneyes
Dec 10, 2013
2,618
3,364
Nijmegen, the Netherlands
For a long while I've been after an "old" Charatan, something predating the more "modern" pipes of the '50s and, especially '60s onward and, to my mind, they are the absolute devil to date with any accuracy. Could anyone say with any certainty "this is a 1940s Charatan"? In any case, I finally came across an old Charatan with hallmarks and mention of vendor which helps to date it with reasonable accuracy and put up a bit of a fight for it. The nomenclature on the pipe reads "Charatan / London / Made" and, opposite that, "DAMMAN / MELBOURNE" (the likely seller). The hallmarks have an "FC" in oval, and Birminham date letters corresponding to 1917. The stem isn't quite flush with the shank, perhaps due to age-related shrinkage? The ad is from a 1921 "The Speculum", a newsletter for Melbourne (AUS) medical students.
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Congrats, excellent ! Nice semi-orific bit, so the stem is probably original.
Wonderful Charatan grain on this one .
Great job on the cleaning, try clean out the mortise a little further .
 
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greeneyes

Lifer
Jun 5, 2018
2,273
12,633
Excellent find!
Thank you, my friend. I sort of chuckle as it really looks no different than any of the other nearly-identical pipes I have. They all look like they came from the same warehouse. 😁
Congrats, excellent ! Nice semi-orific bit, so the stem is probably original.
Great job on the cleaning, try clean out the mortise a little further .
Thanks, sir! Unfortunately there was bare briar left in the mortise after the admittedly lengthy cleaning, so I think shrinkage is to blame for the perhaps 0.4 mm gap and not the usual ring of lacquered tar. I could file down the end of the tenon at some point I suppose.
 
Dec 10, 2013
2,618
3,364
Nijmegen, the Netherlands
Thank you, my friend. I sort of chuckle as it really looks no different than any of the other nearly-identical pipes I have. They all look like they came from the same warehouse. 😁

Thanks, sir! Unfortunately there was bare briar left in the mortise after the admittedly lengthy cleaning, so I think shrinkage is to blame for the perhaps 0.4 mm gap and not the usual ring of lacquered tar. I could file down the end of the tenon at some point I suppose

Oh it's bare briar in there. No gunk.
View attachment 331621
A clean mortise, showing bare briar, is a nice thing to behold :)
Original 1917 silver band with crisp, still sharp hallmarks, yummie :)
What's not to love !
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,991
50,269
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
For a long while I've been after an "old" Charatan, something predating the more "modern" pipes of the '50s and, especially '60s onward and, to my mind, they are the absolute devil to date with any accuracy. Could anyone say with any certainty "this is a 1940s Charatan"? In any case, I finally came across an old Charatan with hallmarks and mention of vendor which helps to date it with reasonable accuracy and put up a bit of a fight for it. The nomenclature on the pipe reads "Charatan / London / Made" and, opposite that, "DAMMAN / MELBOURNE" (the likely seller). The hallmarks have an "FC" in oval, and Birminham date letters corresponding to 1917. The stem isn't quite flush with the shank, perhaps due to age-related shrinkage? The ad is from a 1921 "The Speculum", a newsletter for Melbourne (AUS) medical students.
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Niice snag! Looking at the that semi-orific slot, i'm wondering i it started out as an orific bit and was later reshaped to create that slot.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,991
50,269
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com

xrundog

Lifer
Oct 23, 2014
1,297
9,208
Ames, IA
Niice snag! Looking at the that semi-orific slot, i'm wondering i it started out as an orific bit and was later reshaped to create that slot.
I’ve got some earlier English pipes with stems that are slotted like that. They look uniform enough that I don’t think they’ve been messed with. I guess they could be replaced, but the material and shaping look right. It’s hard to draw conclusions from a small sample though. All it takes is one or two tobacconists who liked slotting stems to screw up the data.😀
 

greeneyes

Lifer
Jun 5, 2018
2,273
12,633
Niice snag! Looking at the that semi-orific slot, i'm wondering i it started out as an orific bit and was later reshaped to create that slot.
I'm not sure. I'll have a closer look, and ask for an opinion from a guy I know who knows about such things. ;) I'm curious about what this single data point represents, since I'm unable to find many examples of other pipes from this approximate date. There was one on Worthpoint, but the photos didn't survive the listing. [EDIT] Just seen now, in fact, that Ken Barnes (your compilation) had a similarly marked exemplar from 1912. Very similar indeed. And he also had a very exciting and ultra-rare pipe with the "FC" stamp in the stem for which I've also been waiting patiently for the clouds to part and fall into my collection.
 

greeneyes

Lifer
Jun 5, 2018
2,273
12,633
The pipe, by the way, came from an estate in Evanston, Illinois. This particular location is significant to the genesis of the Chicagoland Pipe Collectors Club and several people with whom we are familiar in the pipe world. Perhaps it is from the estate of a recently-deceased collector from the area.
 
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sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,991
50,269
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
I'm not sure. I'll have a closer look, and ask for an opinion from a guy I know who knows about such things. ;) I'm curious about what this single data point represents, since I'm unable to find many examples of other pipes from this approximate date. There was one on Worthpoint, but the photos didn't survive the listing. [EDIT] Just seen now, in fact, that Ken Barnes (your compilation) had a similarly marked exemplar from 1912. Very similar indeed. And he also had a very exciting and ultra-rare pipe with the "FC" stamp in the stem for which I've also been waiting patiently for the clouds to part and fall into my collection.
Ken asked me to do a bit of researching about the FC stamp. I thought the year was 1911. Oh well. That. plus a variety of other info sharing with Ken finally led to my being offered the 1883 Barling Magnum at dealer's cost. Woo hoo!
 

OzPiper

Lifer
Nov 30, 2020
6,866
37,109
72
Sydney, Australia
Maybe @OzPiper could chime in here. Pretty sure he is an authority down under for age related shrinkage
While I am happy to profer my opinion(s) gratuitously on a variety of subjects (of which I may have little or no expertise), I am willing to defer to the urologists amongst us on the subject of “Age-related Pipe Shrinkage Down Under”
😁
 

georged

Lifer
Mar 7, 2013
6,088
16,692
I’ve got some earlier English pipes with stems that are slotted like that. They look uniform enough that I don’t think they’ve been messed with. I guess they could be replaced, but the material and shaping look right. It’s hard to draw conclusions from a small sample though. All it takes is one or two tobacconists who liked slotting stems to screw up the data.😀

There is definitely a percentage of original orifics that were slotted after the fact floating around out there.

Cutting a "factory clean" slot by hand is one of those tougher to do than it looks things, though, for reasons that a tobacconist-backroom repair guy a century ago would not have been interested in pursuing, "juice ain't worth the squeeze" style. Meaning a close inspection will tell you if it's original or modified 99% of the time.
 
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Dec 10, 2013
2,618
3,364
Nijmegen, the Netherlands
Someone wanted a slot. My 1883 Barling magnum had a conversion from orific to semi orific at some point in its long life.
Please excuse my ignorance, or perhaps I get lost in translation here.
What is a slot regarding the conversion from etc. ?
I imagine it makes for a more easy draw by opening up the orific bit ?
As I sometimes do with a factory bit to make it look more "artisanal" and more comfortable ?
 
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