Why are some pipes “expensive”?

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sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
22,956
58,307
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Like with most of everything else, it boils down to perception.

Handmade artisan pipes take more time and effort to make, therefore they must be better. The counter argument could be made that handmade artisan pipes are the result of inefficiency and nothing more.

Someone may perceive the handmade process and resulting uniqueness as more desirable, while someone else may find no attraction in it.

Some value rarity and/or reputation. Others don’t value rarity and/or reputation that much.

Etc.

Etc.

Etc.

And there’s a certain level of herd instinct and monkey see, monkey do. If so many people think highly of whatsis, whatsis must be wonderful, worth the pursuit, and worth the money.

I’m not suggesting that there are no actual differences between pipes, just that they’re not to be bound by simple definitions.

One of my favorite pipes to smoke is a Brebbia for which I paid a whopping $2 on eBay. Best $2 I ever spent.

That doesn’t mean that every Brebbia, or every $2 pipe, is going to be a spectacular smoker. Nor will every expensive pipe be a good or rotten smoker. At best you’ll be playing the odds, based on how you perceive them.
 

elvishrunes

Part of the Furniture Now
Jun 19, 2017
551
1,127
It’s all of the above you said, sometimes craftsmanship, materials, sometimes just reputation Like in the case of new Dunhills that are average factory pipes going for high end artisan prices…. You can get a one of a kind hand carved Ardor for about 1/2 or 1/3 of a factory Dunhill, or a Neerup for 1/6, makes no sense but I assume Dunhill has the reputation that can command those prices, good for them even though I disagree…. I enjoy my lower mid end pipes, maybe if I had lots of extra cash one day I’d get a mid level artisan, but till then don’t care.
 

HeadMisfit

Can't Leave
Oct 15, 2025
455
316
It’s all of the above you said, sometimes craftsmanship, materials, sometimes just reputation Like in the case of new Dunhills that are average factory pipes going for high end artisan prices…. You can get a one of a kind hand carved Ardor for about 1/2 or 1/3 of a factory Dunhill, or a Neerup for 1/6, makes no sense but I assume Dunhill has the reputation that can command those prices, good for them even though I disagree…. I enjoy my lower mid end pipes, maybe if I had lots of extra cash one day I’d get a mid level artisan, but till then don’t care.
Most of the self called artisans strictly copy nording and tsuge. Or they buy those 10$ ebay pipes and sell on Facebook for 300$
 

Waning Embers

Captain of the Black Frigate
Nov 12, 2014
47,718
128,968
With all that diffusion in the briar on the side it would have been much better to rusticate it. IMO
That's the plateu. Birdseye is one of the defining characteristics of the blowfish shape.
687_9734blowfish32-600x263-4.jpg


Rustication ruins a pipe. Nothing natural left.