I would argue that the Golden Age began around 1890, peaked around 1930s, began a decline around the 1950s, and finally kicked the bucket in the mid 1990s.
What we're currently experiencing is a marketing executives projection, a mish-mash of historical and modern formulas (the tobaccos themselves and the images they convey).
Diversity and quality of raw material steadily decrease, while the appearance of variety increases as the various houses struggle against the inevitable loss of quality with every process and recombination of what dwindling supply remains. The exotic Orientals are gone. The Blue Mountain Latakia is gone. The hand-processed Empire Virginias are supplanted by machine grown Brazilian leaf.
That a few old houses remain, gasping thin breath against ever restrictive legislation and industrial scale farming is chance fortune against the winds, and even they are shifting and readapting to survive.
What we're currently experiencing is a marketing executives projection, a mish-mash of historical and modern formulas (the tobaccos themselves and the images they convey).
Diversity and quality of raw material steadily decrease, while the appearance of variety increases as the various houses struggle against the inevitable loss of quality with every process and recombination of what dwindling supply remains. The exotic Orientals are gone. The Blue Mountain Latakia is gone. The hand-processed Empire Virginias are supplanted by machine grown Brazilian leaf.
That a few old houses remain, gasping thin breath against ever restrictive legislation and industrial scale farming is chance fortune against the winds, and even they are shifting and readapting to survive.