I can remember seeing a local business owner when I was a teenager named K B Youngblood smoking a big Danish Freehand and I wanted that pipe, not quite as much as the hundred dollars KB said they cost.
A hundred dollars in 1974 would be just over six hundred dollars today. I had the hundred but not to spend all of it on one pipe.
A few years later I happened on KB in Kansas City and he admired my girlfriend so much and she admired his Nording so much I went to a pipe shop that day, and became the owner of a large Nording Freehand grade 3 that only cost $40 (about $200 today) and it proudly reads Hand Made in Denmark by Eric Nording. Except for a hard to see flaw in the finish it’s a beautful pipe and I still own it.
Over the years I’ve bought over a dozen new and used Danish Freehand style pipes, and I’ve noticed the prices have not increased much and the quality has not progressed at all, and even backslid a bit.
Here’s my cheapest new unsmoked Bari Special Hand Cut that does say, Handmade in Denmark. It was only $35 about ten years ago. It was hard to break in, but now an excellent smoker. But in no way does it compare with my Preben Holm and Stanwell and Nording pipes from the glory years of Danish freehands.
I’ve noticed if a pipe is Made in Denmark they’ll always say so, like a watch Made in Switzerland. I have freehand style pipes made elsewhere and they aren’t so proud of it.
For those who know, concerning a Danish Freehand style pipe, what are the differences between pipes that say Hand Cut, Hand Made, and what makes a Danish pick axe bent style pipe a geniune Freehand?
A hundred dollars in 1974 would be just over six hundred dollars today. I had the hundred but not to spend all of it on one pipe.
A few years later I happened on KB in Kansas City and he admired my girlfriend so much and she admired his Nording so much I went to a pipe shop that day, and became the owner of a large Nording Freehand grade 3 that only cost $40 (about $200 today) and it proudly reads Hand Made in Denmark by Eric Nording. Except for a hard to see flaw in the finish it’s a beautful pipe and I still own it.
Over the years I’ve bought over a dozen new and used Danish Freehand style pipes, and I’ve noticed the prices have not increased much and the quality has not progressed at all, and even backslid a bit.
Here’s my cheapest new unsmoked Bari Special Hand Cut that does say, Handmade in Denmark. It was only $35 about ten years ago. It was hard to break in, but now an excellent smoker. But in no way does it compare with my Preben Holm and Stanwell and Nording pipes from the glory years of Danish freehands.
I’ve noticed if a pipe is Made in Denmark they’ll always say so, like a watch Made in Switzerland. I have freehand style pipes made elsewhere and they aren’t so proud of it.
For those who know, concerning a Danish Freehand style pipe, what are the differences between pipes that say Hand Cut, Hand Made, and what makes a Danish pick axe bent style pipe a geniune Freehand?
Last edited by a moderator: