Jvnshr,
Thanks for posting the better picture. Size of hands, position of thumb and being off the table-bed makes this Ken Cutting. Watch that thumb!
Actually, I have never hand-turned a pipe on a lathe in my life.
You were the only Cutter I knew who specialized. Not only didn't you Turn, you didn't Shape and the few times that you stained a pipe, Shirley would fix it after you were finished
. My skills at pipe making are the same as Ken's, except that I couldn't Cut anything but myself.
Apologies if I listed about the grades below the "P" before. They were:
"R" = Least expensive branded James Upshall (link below to an "R" currently on eBay).
Deeper red, less bright and a bit of a matte finish, the bowls were often (always) carbonized. Same great briar, same craftsmen, but these had cosmetic (not serious) flaws that were hidden with stain. They were culled from the best Tilsheads and it was a way to keep the company solvent as Tilsheads still cost more to make than their raw materials.
James Upshall "R"
"S" = originally a German orange/red finish. German distributor wanted the exclusive so we changed to a bright, deep red, with natural bowl, as the "S". A shipment was received with this grade incorrectly marked as "A".
This (posted earlier in this thread) is an "A" that was supposed to be an "S" (as above)
"A" = Was supposed to be better than the "P" or a large "B" grade with a hand-cut rod vulc stem. Only the prototype was ever made (I bought it on eBay last year). Some "S" came through, marked as "A" (see link above). Years later the "A" (link below) was a dark tan finish priced below the "P" and followed by the "R" that largely replaced the red "S".
This is an example of the later "A" finish (dark tan).
I'm not sure if Ken was still at Upshall when the "A" (dark tan) and "R" were being made. Tilsheads were still over a third of production.