Looks awesome, love the pattern
Looks awesome, love the pattern
I like it with the rim back to briar. Very striking look.
I did not.I like the way they both turned out.
Did you look into the paints heat tolerance ranges? I’m interested to know if the paint and other media applied will tolerate the heat produced by smoking?
My assessment, it’s an apple shaped pipe.I did not.
I was under the impression that the outside of the bowl would never get hot enough to be a concern for the paint.
I could be wrong.
I’ve been smoking the red one all day yesterday and today… so far it hasn’t gotten hotter than normal imo, no bubbling, no ‘effect’ to the paint job yet.
But I want to smoke it a lot more (100+ bowl’s) before I decide to paint another one.
Had a question for y’all, do you think the shape of the red one is an apple? Or a pot?
Thanks!Great job on all three.
Other brands mask their pipes with black or other solid colored lacquer and other colorings that mask the grain of the pipe, so why not?I agree it is a nice job of painting them, but I just have to ask "Why"??
It's just kind of fun I guess?I agree it is a nice job of painting them, but I just have to ask "Why"??
Why smoke? Why paint? Why make music? Why eat? Why question?I agree it is a nice job of painting them, but I just have to ask "Why"??
Briar doesn't breathe enough to make a noticeable difference in how hot the stummel becomes.I think they are beautiful pipes, but I wonder how hot they will get since the briar will not be able to breathe. The pipe is now almost like Brylon. If they stay cool, and the paint doesn't bubble, you have made a great product.
Sorry to mention that briar does not “breath”, that’s an old pipe myth. Briar is a very dense wood, comparable to oak or beechwood, with no airflow between the cells at all.I think they are beautiful pipes, but I wonder how hot they will get since the briar will not be able to breathe. The pipe is now almost like Brylon. If they stay cool, and the paint doesn't bubble, you have made a great product.
Maybe the bubble thing appears in the long run. They used nitrocellulose lacquer for pipes to give it a shine. That kind of lacquer looses its flexibility and adhesive characteristics over time.I did not.
I was under the impression that the outside of the bowl would never get hot enough to be a concern for the paint.
I could be wrong.
I’ve been smoking the red one all day yesterday and today… so far it hasn’t gotten hotter than normal imo, no bubbling, no ‘effect’ to the paint job yet.
But I want to smoke it a lot more (100+ bowl’s) before I decide to paint another one.
Had a question for y’all, do you think the shape of the red one is an apple? Or a pot?