I've looked over his work and never saw one tempting. It's great there's an audience for all pipes.My Larry Roush Scrotum Pipe. Not pleasing to the eye but it is a magical smoking flake pipe.
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I've looked over his work and never saw one tempting. It's great there's an audience for all pipes.My Larry Roush Scrotum Pipe. Not pleasing to the eye but it is a magical smoking flake pipe.
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If it is any kind of burden to you, I’d gladly take it off your hands. A well-colored meer is always a thing of beauty in my eyes!
That meer is beautiful


Sneaky liitle pipes, aren't they? I bought an Estate Mr. Brog No. 53 "Heavy" for $10 and damned if it isn't just a great smoker! Ugly as sin, but a great smoker. Looks very similar to this only without the fat stummel and stem.Yeah, there are some mutts in this post for sure. So I guess it's my turn. I bought this "thing" about two months ago. My first Mr. Brog, the #52 "Scoot", precisely because I thought it was ugly. And cheap. $20 bucks US plus $6 shipping to my door in Prince George, from Poland. To make it worse, it was pear wood, which requires a careful and progressive break-in so as not to scorch. In proceeding with a careful ascending series of cool burning cavendish darks, I frankly fell in love with the what was now "Little Cute Monster" because it smoked like a dream.
It's amazing what can turn beautiful when it is viewed from a different perspective. So impressed was I, that I bought another, which I'm going to refinish black, to practice my pipe repairing and finishing skills which at this point are non-existant. However, I have a friend who is now making pipes who thought it was not a bad idea and he's going to coach me. I'll post it here when I'm finished . . . . but who knows when, eh?
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To make it worse, it was pear wood, which requires a careful and progressive break-in so as not to scorch.
I had a few pear wood pipes in the beginning simply because they were cheap and I didn't "know better". Other than the newbie trying not to burn the rim with a lighter, I don't think it was really much different than breaking in a briar, which I have now done a few times. I didn't notice any problems with the pear wood being more susceptible...

That's an Ardor. They do a number of different types of rustication/carving that are definitely unique. This is their Alveare style, I believe. Like Ser Jacopo, some of their pipes definitely push the envelope on originality, and require an acquired taste.I don’t own this but seeing it on the Italian website made me search for a forum thread. I don’t know what to think of this “rustication.” It looks like a Lego pipe had sex with a Castello Sea Rock. I’m trying to think if there’s ANY way I could EVER find this appealing.View attachment 273237

I wouldn't put this last one near my other pipes. It might be contagious.
Hey hey it's stamped De LuxeI wouldn't put this last one near my other pipes. It might be contagious.
some of their pipes definitely push the envelope on originality, and require an acquired taste. . . . . .
I personally don't find it ugly, the overall shape is really well done, as far as I can tell from this angle.
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This is my featherROCK from “the pipe”. I paid $10 at an antique shop and it has never been smoked. It has a resin bowl with pyrolytic graphite chamber. It’s too ugly and weird to smoke!
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