Who is the Greatest Living Artisan Pipe Maker?

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HawkeyeLinus

Lifer
Oct 16, 2020
5,857
42,251
Iowa
If you like ‘em buy ‘em.

I’m only familiar with a few that I’ve commissioned from and the pipes are all great (that I’ve kept - one turned out butt ugly, lol, and never posted about it and won’t, okay can’t because I tossed it) - Rubio, @doug535, @cramptholomew, @Luiz Lavos all terrific in my book. And whomever carved my Meer - wow!
 
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Reactions: UB 40

Peterson314

Part of the Furniture Now
Sep 13, 2019
549
4,621
Atlanta, GA
At the risk of kinda answering OP's question, I find it hard to enjoy super outlandish pipes. I'd own one, but I probably wouldn't smoke it.

I like artists that make pipes that look like pipes, but are just done exceptionally well. So for artisans, I gravitate to Ser Jacopo, Castello, etc.

I've been waiting on one of y'all to buy this Chris Askwith Devil Anse so I don't have to.

1693854799460.png
 

georged

Lifer
Mar 7, 2013
6,096
16,714
Just now saw this locked-then-unlocked thread.

Here's my take:

Without having a pipe in hand---and knowing exactly what you are looking at regarding points of mechanical design, the materials used, and construction techniques---any "best maker" decision you come to is based only on what a photo shows.

And that is visual-only information that is distorted by angles, views, lighting, distance, focal length, post-processing software, and so on. (Whether maliciously or not, doesn't matter. The laws of physics are in charge.)

Meaning pics aren't even enough to reliably judge flow and overall design.

Trust me. I headed the three-man judging panel that determined the winners of the top pipe carving contest in the world for a decade. What you SEE in a photo---more precisely what you THINK you see---is insufficient to determine much about anything beyond flow and overall design in a general way, and usually in an "intended to flatter and favor the subject" sort of way.

And that's just for starters. Without good execution and proper implementation, nothing else matters.
 

boston

Part of the Furniture Now
Jun 27, 2018
561
1,284
Boston
Larry Roush and Trevor Talbert have been making very well engineered and unique pipes for many years. Neither of these carvers are "me-too", they carved / created their own styles. I own pipes from each of these carvers.
 

HawkeyeLinus

Lifer
Oct 16, 2020
5,857
42,251
Iowa
haha yeah that too.
And I'm not putting down anything on YT, lots of good content out there with relatively few views, and those that garner 1 million are relatively few and far between, so hope nobody is misunderstanding what I meant by the contrast!
 

LeafErikson

Lifer
Dec 7, 2021
2,280
20,055
Oregon
And I'm not putting down anything on YT, lots of good content out there with relatively few views, and those that garner 1 million are relatively few and far between, so hope nobody is misunderstanding what I meant by the contrast!
hell I have some yt vids with that many views haha. If someone wants to take offense to your funny joke they're too damn sensitive.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: HawkeyeLinus

AroEnglish

Rehabilitant
Jan 7, 2020
5,178
15,242
#62
Just now saw this locked-then-unlocked thread.

Here's my take:

Without having a pipe in hand---and knowing exactly what you are looking at regarding points of mechanical design, the materials used, and construction techniques---any "best maker" decision you come to is based only on what a photo shows.

And that is visual-only information that is distorted by angles, views, lighting, distance, focal length, post-processing software, and so on. (Whether maliciously or not, doesn't matter. The laws of physics are in charge.)

Meaning pics aren't even enough to reliably judge flow and overall design.

Trust me. I headed the three-man judging panel that determined the winners of the top pipe carving contest in the world for a decade. What you SEE in a photo---more precisely what you THINK you see---is insufficient to determine much about anything beyond flow and overall design in a general way, and usually in an "intended to flatter and favor the subject" sort of way.

And that's just for starters. Without good execution and proper implementation, nothing else matters.
I agree. While style and aesthetics can't be excluded from the criteria, we do need to take craftsmanship into it. I’ve got an artisan pipe that I absolutely adore and it looks perfect in photos but up close you can see where it could've been finished better.