Thank you! You mean Cadogan possibly made pipes for Sasieni's 'Coat-of-Arms' sub-brand and put Comoy's 212 lovat number on it? For what reason, a little inside joke?Don’t quote me on this, but I think Cadogan made pipes with the same shape numbers but stamped with different brand names
Nice Lovat by the way
Can you post pictures of the nomenclature? Pipepedia shows two examples:Coat-of-Arms (Sasieni sub-brand) straight billiard, number 212. The engraving on it says this on one side of the shank says “Coat of Arms” “London Made” and “212”. On the other side it says “Made in England”.
Oddly, considering it has 212 engraved on it, it is the same exact shape of Comoy's Blue Riband Lovat (212).
Stem has an S in a circle.
Really good looking pipe. Someone smoked it plenty. Love the unique sizes of the shank and stem.
Do you agree that this is just a standard Coat-of-Arms 212 (couldn't find that model reference number system anywhere so as far as I'm concerned it's just the code they used for this pipe). It's just kind of weird that it's the exact same number as the Comoy's Blue Riband Lovat (212).
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Can you post pictures of the nomenclature? Pipepedia shows two examples:
This COM does not look like a Sasieni stamp:
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This one is a Sasieni COM, at least as we know it.
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"Who Made That Pipe" shows Coat of Arms as unknown.
Could there have been two different Coat of Arms brands? (would explain the odd shape number).
Incredible find! With that nomenclature, the production date ranges from the late 1940's to 1979, unfortunately broad.Here's a Sasieni Four Dot Brooklands I recently found in a small-town consignment shop. It is the first and only time I have ever found a nice pipe for a bargain at a consignment shop/antique mall. I could see the rustication from across the room and, as I walked up to the case, saw the baby blue dots, which got my heart racing. It's weird because all the other pipes were trash. It cleaned up really nice and is now my favorite pipe in my collection.
If anyone can help me date this pipe, it would be greatly appreciated.
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Cadogan owned the brands, so they could do what they likeThank you! You mean Cadogan possibly made pipes for Sasieni's 'Coat-of-Arms' sub-brand and put Comoy's 212 lovat number on it? For what reason, a little inside joke?
Can you post pictures of the nomenclature? Pipepedia shows two examples:
This COM does not look like a Sasieni stamp:
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This one is a Sasieni COM, at least as we know it.
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"Who Made That Pipe" shows Coat of Arms as unknown.
Could there have been two different Coat of Arms brands? (would explain the odd shape number).
Great point - that Coat of Arms has to have a Comoy's connection not Sasieni.Cadogan owned the brands, so they could do what they like
The Sasieni Coat of Arms Bulldog (top photo) has a shape number 331 C - the same as a Comoy bent Bulldog
Wonderful pipe, congrats !Here's a Sasieni Four Dot Brooklands I recently found in a small-town consignment shop. It is the first and only time I have ever found a nice pipe for a bargain at a consignment shop/antique mall. I could see the rustication from across the room and, as I walked up to the case, saw the baby blue dots, which got my heart racing. It's weird because all the other pipes were trash. It cleaned up really nice and is now my favorite pipe in my collection.
If anyone can help me date this pipe, it would be greatly appreciated.
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Given the fact that we can see that portions of the stamping area are cut off by the rustication I wouldn't let the lack of a patent worry you to much. It otherwise looks like a proper 1920-25ish Sasieni to me, and a very nice one at that.After researching my pipe a bit more, I am now uncertain of it's age. There seems to be some debate as to how long the one-dot was used... The thing that confuses me is the lack of patent no. and the "MADE IN ENGLAND" is straight, not oval. Perhaps they could not fit the oval in such a tight space? Any help pinning the age range down would be greatly appreciated. Here are a couple more pics:
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The shape number and stinger seem to match the ones depicted in this old advertisement on Pipedia (https://pipedia.org/images/4/4b/SasieniShapes.jpg):
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Agreed on those points and date. What an incredible find! 100 years old, and looks like it was made recently.Given the fact that we can see that portions of the stamping area are cut off by the rustication I wouldn't let the lack of a patent worry you to much. It otherwise looks like a proper 1920-25ish Sasieni to me, and a very nice one at that.