Ken Barnes Returns To Finding The Grain - Pix Heavy

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sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,718
49,054
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
One of the great pleasures of being a member of the piping community is making friends in it. For the past several years, Ken and I have kept up an interesting and lively correspondence. Ken is one of the nicest people I know.
So when Ken let me know that he had returned to pipe making I was excited by the news.
For those of you not familiar with Ken's story, Ken started at Charatan as a teenager, learning all aspects of the craft under the mentoring of Chief Carver Barry Jones, and later went on to Co-Found James Upshall Pipes.
Ken is famous for his ability to "find the grain" in a block of briar, and cut that briar to bring the most out of it. Pete Siegel, Upshall's US distributor, said that it was as though Ken had x-ray vision. He could look at a block and "see" where the grain was going inside of it. He's still doing that.
Ken sent me two of his pipes to show at the WCPS. I hadn't intended to sell them. One of them, an exquisite billiard with a little Bang influence in the shaping, got away, but I refused to part with this one:
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I can see some of the Charatan/Upshall lineage in this pipe, along with Ken's own spin.
Rick Newcombe got three pipes from Ken, and we met up at the WCPS and created a little display at Rick's table. Rick kept one and sold the other two that he had. So, we can truthfully say that we sold all of Ken's pipes that were available for sale at the WCPS.
Ken loves the classic shapes, and looks for blocks whose grain will allow him to carve a classic straight grain. It's a bit of a tightrope walk since classical shapes have well defined definitions of shape and proportion, so it's different than "following the grain". He studies the block, decides what classical shape that block will yield, then removes the excess material, freeing the pipe from its confines.
Ken's pipes will be available for purchase at Scandpipes, and Ken is setting up his own website. You can also contact him via PM, as he's a member here.

 
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jguss

Lifer
Jul 7, 2013
2,647
7,171
I was at the Vegas show, and lucky enough to see the pipes that Jesse and Rick had brought in person. Amazing as the photos are, they don't do justice to the grain or craftsmanship of the pipe. They were all gorgeous.

 

dmcmtk

Lifer
Aug 23, 2013
3,672
1,709
Very nice Jesse. The work of an "Old School" artisan! :D Any pictures of Ken's other pipes at WCPS?

 

jpmcwjr

Lifer
May 12, 2015
26,281
30,318
Carmel Valley, CA
As we say en France, "encroyable!!"- incredible; extremely fine. I have also had the pleasure of corresponding with Ken, who's a gentleman in the truest sense of the term. So glad he's back to his craft, and it was a pleasure to see the four pipes Jesse mentions at the WCPS.
Here's a quick and dirty iPhone photo of the four, in case Jesse didn't get to shoot them properly..
barnes4pipeswcps.jpg


 
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npod

Lifer
Jun 11, 2017
2,947
1,071
I love this story. I love these pipes. I love the photography. I am in love all over again.

 
May 9, 2018
1,687
87
Raleigh, NC
Those look quite amazing! I was admiring his work a few months ago when he posted pictures of a whole gaggle of them, and I think those look quite similar. Not sure if they're the same ones, but they look like they could be. All the same, all of the work I've seen from Ken is outstanding. Can't wait to see what the site looks like once it gets up and running!

 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,718
49,054
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Ken does beautiful work! BTW, the draft is nice and open. Charatan airways were 4mm for straights and 4.2mm for bents, and Ken uses those widths on his pipes.
John, thanks for posting the picture of the four pipes. The one on the lower right is the billiard that I very reluctantly sold. It's a beautiful pipe! There were five pipes, but one had already sold, a magnificent footed cutty. The one on the upper left, Rick Newcombe kept for himself.
I love the photography.
Your pix, Jesse? Very nice!
Thank you both. I am guilty as charged. I lit to show the grain and I think these came out reasonably well.

 

npod

Lifer
Jun 11, 2017
2,947
1,071
Jesse, prior to this beauty, how long had it been since you got a new pipe? You have mentioned prior that your acquisition phase was basically over. I think you struck appropriately on this one. Was it PAD at first sight?

 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
20,718
49,054
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Jesse, prior to this beauty, how long had it been since you got a new pipe? You have mentioned prior that your acquisition phase was basically over. I think you struck appropriately on this one. Was it PAD at first sight?
I picked up a 1920 Barling earlier this year, and a Paul Tatum. Or maybe the Tatum was last year. I forget. But I'd been following Ken's progress toward returning to pipemaking for over a year and I told him that I was holding out for one of his pipes when he was ready to start selling. and I told Ken that if he could get me something in time for the WCPS, I'd show it off at the show. A month and a half ago Ken sent me images of 9 pipes that he thought that I might like and I told him which I liked best. He then selected two for me and customized the bite area to my specs.
Considering that at the height of my acquisition mania I was buying 3 to 4 pipes a month, if not more, 3 to 4 in a year is quite a drop. The only thing I'm still looking for is a Barling companion set. Other than that, I'm good.
I was admiring his work a few months ago when he posted pictures of a whole gaggle of them, and I think those look quite similar. Not sure if they're the same ones, but they look like they could be.
These particular pipes are more recent.

 
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