A few years ago, I came across an old pipe carved in the likeness of a dog. It was one of the nicer pipes like it that I have seen, so I grabbed it. The “collar” attached to the shank by a bone screw was split and a short stem had been shoved in there. I repaired the split, cleaned up the stummel, and fitted it with a long acrylic stem. The stem was just a wild guess on the length and shape.
Fast forward to now. A nearly identical pipe is now sitting on my desk. It is unsmoked and sports its original, solid rubber stamped stem with a round button, not slotted. The collar is brass studded.
I would love to hear any thoughts or theories on these pipes. With no maker’s marks or signatures, they are a mystery to me. I was told that with the solid rubber stem, round and unslotted button, bone screw, and style they may indicate they may be from the mid to late 1800s, possibly European made. If that is true, it is amazing that they would have gone different directions only to have arrived on my desk a few years apart so long after their crafting. This also makes me curious how many of the pack are still out there in the wild.
Whether they are uncommon creations or tourist items made by the hundreds, I’m enjoying seeing the pair together. I've since reshaped the curve of the acrylic stem to match the curve of the solid rubber stem. My next step will be to build a proper display for the two.
The first, restored with an acrylic stem; the only thing I had at the time:

Here is the one recently arrived after a clean up and polish (unsmoked and original stem):




Fast forward to now. A nearly identical pipe is now sitting on my desk. It is unsmoked and sports its original, solid rubber stamped stem with a round button, not slotted. The collar is brass studded.
I would love to hear any thoughts or theories on these pipes. With no maker’s marks or signatures, they are a mystery to me. I was told that with the solid rubber stem, round and unslotted button, bone screw, and style they may indicate they may be from the mid to late 1800s, possibly European made. If that is true, it is amazing that they would have gone different directions only to have arrived on my desk a few years apart so long after their crafting. This also makes me curious how many of the pack are still out there in the wild.
Whether they are uncommon creations or tourist items made by the hundreds, I’m enjoying seeing the pair together. I've since reshaped the curve of the acrylic stem to match the curve of the solid rubber stem. My next step will be to build a proper display for the two.
The first, restored with an acrylic stem; the only thing I had at the time:

Here is the one recently arrived after a clean up and polish (unsmoked and original stem):














