So I have had a few pipes for over ten years now and I can say the most "attention" I have ever given them from a cleaning standpoint was running some pipe cleaners through them. I decided to give about half of mine a very thorough cleaning last week but was unhappy with the stems on these two. The first is an Italian briar no name (it just has Italy stamped on it)and the second is a Benton. Here are the before pics.
The Italian:
The Benton:
And here are the after pics.
The Italian:
The Benton:
I soaked both stems in Oxy Clean for about 18 hours and then rinsed them thoroughly. I then ran some bristled pipe cleaners through them and was AMAZED at how much gunk came out AFTER I gave them what I thought was a thorough cleaning with Baccardi 151 with Q tips and pipe cleaners. I then wet sanded them with 000 steel wool and finished up with some magic eraser. I lightly "waxed" them with Lip Medex (by Blistex) and applied a small, circular motion to it with a clean cotton cloth (think spit shine without the spit). I planned on hitting them with some Tripoli wax and my new buffing wheel but other duties call today.
I know these aren't perfect, but I think they look a LOT better than they did.
Thanks to Pruss and Hfearly for some guidance on this. I plan on working further into restoration/refurbing, but this was my first step.
I would appreciate any guidance on my methodology, the look, the technique, to assist with reducing my learning curve on this new endeavor. I do plan on obtaining some mesh pads up to 12000 grit to get that super glass shine.
Thanks,
Dan
The Italian:
The Benton:
And here are the after pics.
The Italian:
The Benton:
I soaked both stems in Oxy Clean for about 18 hours and then rinsed them thoroughly. I then ran some bristled pipe cleaners through them and was AMAZED at how much gunk came out AFTER I gave them what I thought was a thorough cleaning with Baccardi 151 with Q tips and pipe cleaners. I then wet sanded them with 000 steel wool and finished up with some magic eraser. I lightly "waxed" them with Lip Medex (by Blistex) and applied a small, circular motion to it with a clean cotton cloth (think spit shine without the spit). I planned on hitting them with some Tripoli wax and my new buffing wheel but other duties call today.
I know these aren't perfect, but I think they look a LOT better than they did.
Thanks to Pruss and Hfearly for some guidance on this. I plan on working further into restoration/refurbing, but this was my first step.
I would appreciate any guidance on my methodology, the look, the technique, to assist with reducing my learning curve on this new endeavor. I do plan on obtaining some mesh pads up to 12000 grit to get that super glass shine.
Thanks,
Dan