JOS NYMPFER - late 1800s

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UltraBlue

Lurker
Feb 16, 2024
37
66
Jos NYMPFER was a tobacconist, owner of a store in Liege, Belgium.
The store closed around 1895.
Most likely a St Claude pipe.
I put a rubber seal around the screw to avoid stress and ensure closure. I believe the pipe was unsmoked: no signs of charcoal on the chamber.
The ring is gold.
It looks like amber but I run all basic tests (like hardness, floatability in salty water, etc) and it failed. And I’m happy about that, Amber has an uncanny tendency to crack.
 

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DeerparkDays

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 30, 2022
250
857
Dannevirke, New Zealand
Over a period of 130 years, who knows what could have happened…if the stem has been replaced...perhaps a kid dropped it, perhaps a cat knocked it off a bench, perhaps a rhino charged the house and knocked stuff over!

Nice pipe too, hope you are enjoying it.
 
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UltraBlue

Lurker
Feb 16, 2024
37
66
Over a period of 130 years, who knows what could have happened…if the stem has been replaced...perhaps a kid dropped it, perhaps a cat knocked it off a bench, perhaps a rhino charged the house and knocked stuff over!

Nice pipe too, hope you are enjoying it.
Still, what makes you believe that the stem is not original?
They had other materials available at the time.
 

UltraBlue

Lurker
Feb 16, 2024
37
66
Now, if you have any evidence to say it was a replacement, I’m all ears.
But simply because it’s not Amber, it doesn’t make the case. Thanks
 

xrundog

Lifer
Oct 23, 2014
2,364
26,926
Ames, IA
Now, if you have any evidence to say it was a replacement, I’m all ears.
But simply because it’s not Amber, it doesn’t make the case. Thanks
Okay, orifiic bit, check. I am not trying to troll you. The amber or amber type stems come in a variety of hues and patterns.
I was probably fooled by the coloring as a result of the photography.
The yellow/clear swirl pattern is typical of 20s/40s Bakelite. The amber version is usually more orange. But it’s not a rule and I haven’t seen everything.
 

jguss

Lifer
Jul 7, 2013
2,916
8,091
Is there any reason it can’t be amberoid/amberoide? That was a common option on pipes in the late 1800s.
 

UltraBlue

Lurker
Feb 16, 2024
37
66
That’s right.
And before I bought the pipe I made a ton of research in an effort to avoid real amber…it cracks with time, with light, with oxygen, with alcohol…
 

jguss

Lifer
Jul 7, 2013
2,916
8,091
Here’s a typical explanation:

IMG_2792.jpeg

And here’s a typical trade journal ad showing the routine availability of alternative stem materials:

IMG_2791.jpeg
 
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