ENGLISH PIPES

  • LOEWE Birmingham Standard

    England The Frenchman Emil Loewe was seemingly the first in England who started making pipes of briar in 1856. And he was seemingly  one of the first  introduced “military” mouthpieces (spigots) – for a simple reason to facilitate the production of replacement stems for customers. Since then and till absorption by Cadogan in 1979 Loewe occupies strongly…

  • G.W. SIMS “A”

    England, 1960-70s G.W. Sims (just the modest G.W., though some consider that he was George) is known from the first half of the XX century, and the first pipes of the artisan (and at times a repairman) were marked even more modestly – “GWS”. According to some sources, G. W. used to work for Charatan’s…

  • G. W. SIMS bulldog

    England, 1960-70s G.W. Sims (just the modest G.W., though some consider that he was George) is known from the first half of the XX century, and the first pipes of the artisan (and at times a repairman) were marked even more modestly – “GWS”. According to some sources, G. W. used to work for Charatan’s…

  • HARDCASTLE’S Briar Root

    England, 1946-67 A very interesting and very rare example from the first “dunhill” period, i.e. 1946-1967. While Dunhill Root Briar was the highest serial grade, in this case the finish is rather a hint on a natural structure of a briar root. Unlike the main stream of Hardcastle’s pipes processed at these times by a…

  • COMOY’S The Academy Award 484

    England, 1950-70s The Academy Award series was planned initially as a special gift for participants of the Oscar ceremony, as you can see even a logo on the mouthpiece is corresponding. However, many and many ordinary smokers were interested in these pipes, therefore Comoy’s  started a mass production of The Academy Award series soon.

  • COMOY’S Astor 9

    England, 1950-70s This Comoy’s series was named most probably in honour of the famous Astors family known for its prominence in business, society, and politics in United States and the United Kingdom during the 19th and 20th centuries. John Jacob “Jack” Astor IV  was the richest passenger aboard the RMS Titanic in 1912. Astor pipes…

  • DUNHILL Tanshell 142

    England, 1966 The Dunhill Tanshell series is a child of stormy 1950-60s. Due to a difficult political situation in Algeria supply of Algerian briar was temporally suspended. The situation was used by Dunhill as a good chance to try Sardinian briar and to use own patented deep sandblast technique.  The material is significantly much denser,…

  • JOHN REDMAN Aristocrat

    England An amazing upper range pipe from John Redman! From the first look it’s something between a bull dog and dublin pipes; both the bowl and stem were made by really good and creative carvers and the pipe with its attractive grain looks very uncommon. The pipe doesn’t have a shape number, it seems it…