Vintage Three Nuns Anyone?

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kcvet67

Part of the Furniture Now
Jul 6, 2010
968
0
At that price it's over $20 a bowl.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/BELLS-THREE-NUNS-CUTTER-TOP-TWO-OUNCE-SEALED-TIN-PURCHASED-IN-1937-PIPE-STUD-/391027840619?ssPageName=ADME:B:WNA:US:1653

 

allan

Lifer
Dec 5, 2012
2,429
7
Bronx, NY
Maybe it's the tin?
Come to think of it, there are many that spend $$ on wine per bottle, so, if you can afford it, why not?

 

tarheel1

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 16, 2014
936
2
I would love to try the three nuns when it had perique, but that is a bit out of my price. When was the last year it had perique?

 

iamn8

Lifer
Sep 8, 2014
4,248
14
Moody, AL
Awww CM, wounds been perfect for breaking in the weaver :wink: this morning a grabed a tin of 1997 Dunhill Elizabethian from pipestud

 

escioe

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 31, 2013
702
4
I'm kind of surprised it didn't go for more. Didn't a 4oz tin of similar vintage recently go for over $900? And usually there is a bit of premium on smaller tins.

 
May 31, 2012
4,295
34
I'm kind of surprised it didn't go for more....
I think it's because this tin was the Empire Blend version, which afaik didn't have perique, but used African leaf *, similar to the new Danish incarnation.
Back in the day, it sold for a slightly cheaper price.

:puffy:
*Most likely Rhodesian or British Central Africa ( Malawi), or perhaps even Canadian leaf?

 

JimInks

Sultan of Smoke
Aug 31, 2012
61,302
564,672
Tarheel: 2003 was the last year there was perique in Three Nuns. It was sold to Orlik, who took it out and put in the cheaper priced Kentucky.

 

condorlover1

Lifer
Dec 22, 2013
8,066
27,370
New York
I was just chatting with a fellow from this forum whilst visiting London last week. We both seemed to agree that all this money thrown at old blends from yesteryear is crazy. The stuff just wasn't that great in those days but then that's all that was available. You purchased your tobacco on the day you got paid along with paying your dry cleaning bill, rent, BT bill and British Gas bill and put petrol in your motorcycle. Anything left over was for beer, food and money put away for your holiday along with the Sixty bob a month you gave the man from the Pru for your life insurance who knocked on your door on the second Saturday of every month. Nylon was considered the wonder material of the age, everything else in London was dingy, smoke stained and even in the early 1980s there was a prevalence of bomb sites and lord knows what else around. Pubs closed at 2.30 and there was three channels of television and people would rush home to eat their beans on toast followed by home made cakes that had the consistency of a small Dorset pebble. Foreign holidays were unknown and people took their vacations at the British coast because choice just didn't exist. So in the final analysis who wants to spend a fortune on a brand of tobacco that ancient so you can relive the joys of an earlier miserable time!

 

iamn8

Lifer
Sep 8, 2014
4,248
14
Moody, AL
I think it's a just a matter of cash and curiosity. Had we all had the chance to taste it I doubt anyone would pay those prices, but nostalgia plus curiosity and having the cash means you want it more than anyone else. As the saying goes, curiosity caused the cat financial problems.

 
May 31, 2012
4,295
34
I was just chatting with a fellow from this forum whilst visiting London last week. We both seemed to agree that all this money thrown at old blends from yesteryear is crazy. The stuff just wasn't that great in those days but then that's all that was available. You purchased your tobacco on the day you got paid along with paying your dry cleaning bill, rent, BT bill and British Gas bill and put petrol in your motorcycle. Anything left over was for beer, food and money put away for your holiday along with the Sixty bob a month you gave the man from the Pru for your life insurance who knocked on your door on the second Saturday of every month. Nylon was considered the wonder material of the age, everything else in London was dingy, smoke stained and even in the early 1980s there was a prevalence of bomb sites and lord knows what else around. Pubs closed at 2.30 and there was three channels of television and people would rush home to eat their beans on toast followed by home made cakes that had the consistency of a small Dorset pebble. Foreign holidays were unknown and people took their vacations at the British coast because choice just didn't exist. So in the final analysis who wants to spend a fortune on a brand of tobacco that ancient so you can relive the joys of an earlier miserable time!
Never a truerer statement has been uttered,

you should know because you were actually there,

and know what's what and how was the how,

when that where was there!
How you described that WarHorse advert while motorbiking into Edinburgh still echoes thru my mazing brains.
The intense renown of certain vintage British baccy and the prices they can fetch is a very concrete definition of the word
  • romantic
- the triumph of emotion over intellect.
My dabblings with the old stuff has been very hit 'n miss, more miss than hit,

but when it hits,

it hits !
zeromonnaie.gif


The financial gamble is immense and I only imbibe if I can get 'er cheaply!

fauche.gif

As for how I get my Bell's,

Special Double Cream Stout please!
...this superjuice gets my bells really really rung! :mrgreen:
BellsSpecialDoubleCreamStout.jpg

After 3 or 4 of those just about any baccy tastes like nectar from the sublime gods of nicotinian divinity!

smiley-eatdrink008.gif


:puffy:

 

pipestud

Lifer
Dec 6, 2012
2,010
1,750
Robinson, TX.
Since I sell a lot of the older, rare and no longer produced pipe tobacco tins I am often blessed to find out why so many collectors find these old tins so, well, collectible. Most tell me that they are buying tins such as is the subject of this thread, to add to their collections and they have no intention of opening and smoking the contents of the tins. To them, they are buying a "piece of art" that fits their hobby in similar fashion to someone who collects coins. A coin collector may buy and trade rare and no longer made coins, but have no intention of going to the local grocery store to make a purchase with them. The coin collector's joy in having a year 1937 Silver Dollar in his collection is similar to a pipe and tobacco hobbyist having a 1937 tin of Bell's Three Nuns Empire blend in his. Neither plans to use their item, but both are excited to have those items in their collection.
Some say buying a $400 Rad Davis pipe is crazy. Some say buying a $20 Dr. Grabow is crazy. In respect for our fellow pipe and tobacco hobbyists, I personally think we should be happy for anyone in our hobby who finds excitement in nabbing a $40 tin of old Half & Half or a $400 tin of Three Nuns.
And for the record; I love selling those expensive old tins rather than buying them! :wink:
Best,
Pipestud

 
May 31, 2012
4,295
34
Pipestud,

a most excellent description,

the best one I've heard.
Thanks for ringing thine bell!

:)
I totally agree with the "piece of art" perspective.

So many elements are at play and all combine to form an exquisite object in mine eyes.
I did a boo-boo a while back, thinking I was scooping up an old knife-lid Bulwark just minutes after it had been posted,

hooray!

I had beat everyone to the punch!

8)
http://pipesmagazine.com/forums/topic/find-of-the-day-or-ooops-im-an-idiot
Oh no!

In my excitement I failed to even look at all the pix, and the bottom of the tin had massive pinholes!

:crying:

But,

as an object it stands tall in my collection,

it has a presence.
A certain aura beyond words or description.
I did get to open it up,

which for me is a tremendous delight in and of itself,

the simple act of opening an old cutter-top is near orgasmic!
The leaf had not weathered well, all essence lost,

but it has given me happiness nonetheless.
I'm a romantic old goat!

circle-of-hearts-smiley-emoticon.gif


 

escioe

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 31, 2013
702
4
I'm glad I've never caught collectivitis, where the mere fact of ownership is the reward. I can't imagine dropping $400 on a tin and not smoking it. And yes, if I had the spare cash, I can see spending $400 on the right tin.

 

pipestud

Lifer
Dec 6, 2012
2,010
1,750
Robinson, TX.
I admire somebody who collects in the fashion pointed out by Pipestud, but that's why I gave up my collection of pioneer inspired cow patty art. - Timothy
Howdy rsuninv,
Down here in Texas we prefer Texas Longhorn inspired Cow Patty Art. I have long been a collector of those large and beautifully created and inspired samples. But, unlike the tobacco I collect, I only purchase cow patties that are extremely dry.
Pipestud

 
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