@eljimmy Go for it!I have to jump on the clay pipe ship.
@eljimmy Go for it!I have to jump on the clay pipe ship.
I know that, I picked 4 Peterson Clays from a boot sell for £4.00 last year, I'm a Peterson collector, what a buy ? so they are still findable, I have many in my collection that found over 50 years of collecting Petersons, my second cousin worked for KP and she remembered helping making them in WW2 and my first Clay from KP came from her, they are still available but rare.What good will that do? They stopped selling them 40 odd years ago!
My old man used to buy them from a tobacconist in Llandrindod Wells, 6 at a time! This was in the 60's & they cost literally next to nothing! A clay today with a nickel ferrule and vulcanite stem, would set you back considerably more, if you can find one!
@tobakenist I never knew Peterson made clay pipes; one of the Redcoats at Avoncroft Festival of Living History shared his tin of Peterson Connoisseur's Choice with this fellow clay pipe smoking Redcoat. A good smoke in the King's Clay; the Clay King will have to get a tin of it!I know that, I picked 4 Peterson Clays from a boot sell for £4.00 last year, I'm a Peterson collector, what a buy ? so they are still findable, I have many in my collection that found over 50 years of collecting Petersons, my second cousin worked for KP and she remembered helping making them in WW2 and my first Clay from KP came from her, they are still available but rare.
You would want to have a long stem with an ember that close to your face. We have an old French fort here in Indiana, where people come from all over to reenact that time period. Wonderful time.@Fuelman I've noticed a cooler smoke with a long stem clay pipe; I think a long stem is much better for lighting with an ember from the blacksmith's forge
From what I understand, that's exactly what you do. Just lay the pipe on some hot coals and let all the tar burn off. Once cool, pack it back up and start smoking again.Some great comments on this thread. I have learned a ton about clay pipes that I didn't know before.
Someone said earlier that you clean clays by placing them in a fire. Does that mean that you just lay the entire pipe in the coals of a fire to burn out the impurities? Seems a bit drastic. Of course, I know you could not place the vulcanite stem in the fire should it have one.
I have not broken in my Franken-clay yet (less than 5 smokes so far) and it imparts a discernible clay-ey taste to the smokesI have seen a nice looking old porcelain pipe online and I didn’t know they also impart no flavour. They sound easier to clean than having a small inferno on hand. @OzPiper
There is one in particular I had my eye on. I don’t know if I’ll get it though since it might just sit around like my clay…I have not broken in my Franken-clay yet (less than 5 smokes so far) and it imparts a discernible clay-ey taste to the smokes
On the other hand my porcelain pipe is very neutral.
And getting the walls back to bare porcelain is easy - no cake and no ghosts
Porcelain pipes come up quite frequently on EBay
PM me if you’re interested in a Royal Copenhagen one.
The Danish Pipe Shop has a few listed in their estates section.
I can put you onto a couple of other sites but don’t wish to do so here, as they are not Forums sponsors
I'm already looking. Hahaha!@eljimmy Go for it!