@simong : Wow they have everything on the internet these days. I didn't know it was intended for a lot of the stations but I seem to remember a couple where those tiles had survived the 1960's urge to improve things!
Everything except an answer to oxblooding on pipes! Lol@simong : Wow they have everything on the internet these days. I didn't know it was intended for a lot of the stations but I seem to remember a couple where those tiles had survived the 1960's urge to improve things!
Those red IMP's are nice...I've lingered over that one on Meerschaum Market...just don't really care for the stem colors.They've been making them look like briar for years, someone likely has.
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Contact Burak there, he can get another stem for it.Those red IMP's are nice...I've lingered over that one on Meerschaum Market...just don't really care for the stem colors.
I was afraid you might say that...the stem gave me a good reason not to buy it. I've been getting more adept at talking myself out of pipe purchases.Contact Burak there, he can get another stem for it.
I assume you're referring to the pics @Chasing Embers posted above. I agree the red one doesn't at all look like briar, but the brown one kinda does. It at least gives an idea of what is possible...I don't think I've ever seen one quite like that before.Doesnt look like Briar to me.
This is a cool read, thanks.This post mentions a book “tobaccoland” p 416. A google search makes it appear in the public domain. It has fairly comprehensive directions in two pages for dying a meer.
I have not tested them yet.
The red one reminded me of those grainless Christmas pipes from Peterson last year.I assume you're referring to the pics @Chasing Embers posted above. I agree the red one doesn't at all look like briar, but the brown one kinda does. It at least gives an idea of what is possible...I don't think I've ever seen one quite like that before.
Yeah, that's weird looking briar...like an oxblood meer.The red one reminded me of those grainless Christmas pipes from Peterson last year.
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I agree...kinda cow-turdish...not exactly appealing.Listed as Sandblasted Meerschaum.....
“Sang de Boeuf” means oxblood. Or “blood of beef”, but it just has a certain je na sai quoi!lolI remember seeing a pair of unsmoked meers that had been Oxblooded on the bay years ago. A definate resemblance to the 'iron oxide' colour you mentioned. I'd love to know how they did it but perhaps we'll never know for sure as the practice has like you say dissapeared from living memory.
Funny you noticed the similarity with the 'shit brown' tiles on the Tube. After googling oxblood turns out that's what the architect wanted for the Tube stations. Although he described the colour not as Oxblood or Shit brown but 'Sang de Boeuf'.Probably charged tuppence a tile extra for that as it sounds a bit posher. Lol
From Wikipedia,
From 1903, the English architect Leslie Green used an industrial, solid, sang de boeuf glaze on the glazed architectural terra-cotta tiles for the exteriors of the stations of a large part of the London Underground system, which was then divided between a number of commercial companies. His employer, the Underground Electric Railways Company of London was building the Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway, the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway and the Charing Cross, Euston and Hampstead Railway, which are now respectively sections of the Piccadilly line, Bakerloo line and Northern line. The Leeds Fireclay Companymade the tiles.[11]