ENGLISH PIPES

  • GBD Virgin Collector 9589

    England, 1950-70s One of the top graded GBD pipes. The Virgin series followed their famous Pedigree, Prodigy and Straight Grain grades. The pipe was made in 1970s the latest, before the acquisition of the company by Cadogan. Very interesting nicely grained, large and imposing dublin sitter pipe.

  • DUNHILL Root Briar 501, 1940

    England, 1940 No staining just a natural finish! This is an exciting indeed example of the good old fashioned English pipe carving art. The pipe was made in 1940, already on the beginning of the Wold War II, but it shows the same approach, the same sense of taste and the same highest skills which…

  • JOHN REDMAN Buckingham bent

    England A quite rare series produced at John Redman factory in London in the middle of the XX century. Some people mistake Redman’s Buckingham for the Sasieni line under the same name. No wonder – both manufacturers represented famous English pipe carving tradition and succesfully combined traditional shapes and their own approach and innovations. Classical…

  • PARKER Super Bruyere 810

    England,1950-60s A stylish Parker pipe made in late 1950s or early 1960s, before merge with Hardcastle Pipe Ltd. It was the period, when Parker succesfully combined Dunhill’s resources and production facility and its own, at times very different from Dunhill’s approach to carving, shaping, finishing and marketing. Therefore both experienced pipe collectors and refined smokers…

  • G. W. SIMS rustic apple

    England, 1960-70s According to some sources, G. W. used to work for Charatan’s (that is clearly visible on some Sims pipes) and most probobly, for Barling as well. But finally he found himself as an independent tobacconist and an owner of a little shop in Northern London, which existed till 1980. There is a pleasantly…

  • CHARATAN’S Make Selected 86

    England, 1960s A pipe of the second Charatan’s higher grade next to the highest “Supreme”. It seems the pipe was made before 1960 – the shape number is located together with the nomenclature on the left side of the shank like it was on “family era” pipes. The encircled “L” is not a misunderstanding –…