I love this man's skill level "it's still very fragile..." as he whacks the excess off with uncaring abandon! He has done this for so long he knows EXACTLY how hard he can push on that pipe without crushing it! You or I try it like he did, we would have a handful of pipe pieces!
I'm a Potter yes it would be very fragile but you'd be surprised how quickly you can get used to the way to handle fragile greenware. I just went and made a whole bunch of clay tiles for testing glaze they don't look like tiles like you think about them they're like a little l-shaped pad of clay and they're exceedingly thin and I had to trim probably two dozen of them just now and didn't break any I mean you could have literally just flick your finger and break these so easily but you just get used to it. It probably would only take breaking maybe three or four pipes before you get the hang of it the human hand is an amazing amazing amazing thing I doubt that we will ever be able to create a robotics device with enough feedback to mimic our hands all of the physical cues that go back to the brain as we touch different objects is an incredible amount of data
Thank you for sharing your craft! I love tobacco pipes of all kinds. I find them beautiful and so many are works of art. I have been intrigued by how clay pipes were created and its nothing near what I expected. You make a good video sir. We are sorely lacking in people willing to continue with the old ways of crafting objects such as pipes.
Thanks for sharing! A true craftsman! I just purchased one from a local maker, they are a wonderfully cool dry smoke and allow the flavors to come through. The older generations knew how to enjoy the finer and simple things in life.
@@patrickglaser1560 No, it's just something I've been saying to people for decades. I've never thought about it before, but the only thing I can come up with is that my late father used to call me that when I was very small, so maybe it was buried in my subconcious? Rainbows are beautiful anyway.
What a fantastic fellow. It’s only a true expert who can make something look so easy. You are a fantastic man Rex and thank you so much for sharing your skill and experience. To think that these pipes were in use for 300 years or more, with relatively little change to their functional design, is amazing. And then to see one produced really makes all those “field finds” come alive. Thanks Rex
It's great seeing old traditions of crafting and trades like this being kept alive. I hope he has an apprentice or two, as I think it'd be a real shame if this tradition were lost. There are still quite a few pipe smokers, even in my generation (millenials), but most smoke briar pipes. At any rate, although I would've loved to see more, this was a *great* video.
This was a great video on an old skill! Very cool! Such craftsmanship around something once so common! I think it is so sad there is less pride in work done than there used to be.
Thanks. I have smoked clay pipes but did not know how they were made. For the sake of my front teeth, I mostly stick to briar or corn cob pipes. Having an interest in archaeology, I have seen the skulls of ancient clay pipe smokers and have seem the big notch it wears in your teeth with regular use. I've seen those very long stemmed clay pipes that were used in pubs. The stem being so long because you break off the very time when using them because they were a communal thing that everyone.used. part of the big appeal, of course, was that they were always cheap and produced in large numbers. Thanks much for posting this.
Thanks Rex. In my youth I rather fancied a Church Warden pipe, an affectation, but I liked the idea of something I could point with! I'm not a smoker now (probably never really was either) but I still like the graceful, slender lines of the old clay pipes.
@@planetwisconsin9901 But Nicola says all the pipes she finds are at least 100 years old. Could she be mistaken? As they are clearly still being produced, I suspect she could.
I have two brand new churchwarden long clay pipes, except they are now 146 yrs old! I pulled them out of a wooden barrel 150ft down on a wreck in Irish sea, in 1993-94. Got them in a glass display case, although commonly found, it's very rare to find complete original old ones 😁
That was an awesome video. I've often wondered how the pipes were made. Thanks for posting. I've found a few bowls while out metal detecting but never a whole one.
I have been wondering exactly how they were made now for a long time. I have worked in foundry up to plastic injection but those pipes have been around for a long time and am really impressed with the mold being hand made without there being an EDM to burn the image into the mold. I am also amazed how so many are thrown into the Thames River and don't understand why. It would seem the life span of a clay pipe is short. I'm 73 and when little I saw my great grandmothers clay pipe. Us older guys need to keep busy , it's good for us,,,,thanks for the video
Clay pipes were cheap. When the stem got broken, or the pipe became soaked with tar and nicotine and foul tasting, it was easy to throw it away and buy a new one. One pipe might only last a couple of weeks. A thrifty smoker might wash an old pipe and put it aside to dry and air for a few weeks but it was never as sweet as new.
@assassinlexx Glazing not necessary and adds to cost. There were some fancy ones that were glazed. I have seen shiny ones that had an invisible picture printed on them. As you smoked the heat made the picture appear, a windmill or a flower or something of that nature.
Interesting video. They were routinely thrown into the Thames, much like today's discarded cigarette ends, whenever these 'cheap' clay pipes inevitably got blocked and became unusable. Many of them can still be found in the mud today at low tide.
I've dug up dozens of broken clay pipe fragments in gardens over the years, and around a dozen in my own garden alone. It always brings a smile to my face, as I feel the connection to the gardeners of years gone by, who dug the same patch of ground long ago. Sometimes it is clear from the situation they are found, that they were the last person to turn over that sod, or move that stone, and sometimes, like with my own veg plot, they are just one more soul to have worked that soil in an unbroken line of gardening, back through the seasons, in a cycle that probably started as long before them, as they were before us.
I used to find broken bits of these things in Ontario Canada all the time when I worked for an archeology company, it was probably the 2nd most common type of artifact we would find on European settler sites (first being broken ceramics, ie plates and such).
This was a great video, and hyper-interesting content. After all, this is an ancient craft. I see that he made the pipes for everyone in the series: Lark rise to Candelford, and also to the actors (and filmmakers) in the films: Pirates of the Caribbean, as well as countless BBC dramas. Rex Key has been called: a national treasure. He is constantly getting requests to make pipes for people, which I don't think is strange. I should have liked some of his beautiful pipes, even though I don't smoke, which he doesn't do himself either.
I loved this! I have always wondered how to make them, I used to find them when mudlarking here in Sweden.Thinking of making a crude one for myself now :-)
They where usualy imported from England in barrels. In Nothern Sweden they are quite rare to find, but i still remeber how awsome it was when i found pieces of one in my fathers garden whan i was a little child. Later i found a few pieces on old shipsites in the sea, probably washed asore pieces seafarers throwed in the water whan it was brooken.
@@sheep1ewe There were lots of broken ones outside Sundsvall, the ships got rid of the ballast there before loading timber. Lots of flintstone as well!
@@MartinAhlman That was interesting, i actualy did a search a few miles from the city some years ago, but i think as You say they are probably concentrated finds to certain locations. I will absolutly hawe another look around those areas in the future! (As well as continue my hunt for weather baloons... ;) ) It's quite annoying that the permission papers for legaly use a metal detector in Sweden cost a small fortune today... It had been interesting to search the shores for metal parts from the wooden ship era.
@@MartinAhlman Thank You for the tip! Yes, especialy since i just got my self a new high grade detector... But maybe if it where many people who could share the same area with permission it would be more realistic, in Sweden mudlarking does not need any special premission for picking up loose finds, as it (formaly) does in Brittain, as long as one keep it outside protected "historical sites" and there are not metal objects of historical significance in the finds (but if one offer them to the state and they does not want to buy it from You, You are alloved to keep the find, no matter what,´from what i could found, and it only refear to objects made of metal, not objects made of other materials outside marked (or similary protected) sites.). So, at least from what i could find, i think we hawe a perfectly legal green card for official mudlarking, actualy, and a fine thing in sweden is that it is not only limited to the shores, one only need the elandowners formaly premission to dig in the ground and move rocks, nothing else outside marked areas, så You are basically free to search everywhere as long as it does not collide with any other regulations.
I have several old clays. One was a trade item for North American fur trade. Great little smokers, but the bowl gets too hot to hold. This was nice to watch !
You can always 3D print the mold or carve out a mold of your pipe out of clay and cast it (After firing it) in sand for smelting an aluminium mold of your pipe.
I was thinking same thing, one is not going to find a mould via Amazon. I do think creating a mould out of plaster would be a bit easier. One would need to jimmy rig the wire piece he has as well as that piece he inserted to flesh out the bowl. But I do think this is doable.
Just for personal preference and bragging rights it would be nice to have original moulds though instead of modern day 3d printed stuff.. not that it would do a better job either way... Just like a set of calipers ive got from 1888 made by d kimberly and sons... You just imagine all the hands theyve been through over the years etc... Or it might just be me... Ha
@@tonysolar284, I have a little home hobby type setup for pottery and aluminium casting and am tempted to try that. the most difficult thing is deciding on a design, it has to be attractive enough to justify the effort. Something to do whilst isolating.
@@petersoal40 Naw. It's easy. I'm a skilled craftsman, this is unskilled labor. Anyone who is good with their hands could pick this up in 5 minutes or less.
Just found a broken pipe, here in the old goldfields of Tungamull, near Rockhampton Qld. Has a 'crest' on the bowl, side that you see when smoking. Any one for any ideas for "Maker Identification", who, where to go...?
Thank you for this. Could you please tell us the function of the little heel bump that so many clay pipes feature at the bottom of the stem near the bowl? Thanks again.
willdiscover I’m looking too. I found some online but they sell out. I’m going to check in local thrift stores too. I’m in Pennsylvania in coal country. I’m sure they have em. If not , hand rolled pipes and outside smoking makes them Native American pipes
a British lady with a UA-cam channel called "nicola white mudlark - Tideline Art" she walks the Thames river regularly and finds all kinds of old treasures there including clay pipes some of them 100 year old, since the mold is of the same age, maybe those old recovered pipes were made with this same mold from a pipe make a century ago.....
That looks like something I could do. Where can I get those metal molds? There was an old pipe maker along the Ohio River not far from where I live & clay is abundant here in KY. Great video. Thanks. 👍☮️🌞
I don't smoke, but after watching those mudlarking along the Thames videos and the uniqueness of these (both historic and aesthetic) make me want to get one anyways.
Beautiful what a beautiful pipe. I want one I love to smoke a Clay Pipe .Thank you for the video . You Sir are a Amazing Man . God bless please let me know how to contact you for a pipe
No varnish or glaze just plain white clay. My grandfather sometimes got fancy ones that had a shiny finish, they had a design printed on them like a windmill or a flower. This was invisible when the pipe was new but slowly developed as he smoked it and it darkened.
Lovely video. In rural Ireland at wakes the mourners were given clay pipes full of tobacco and bottles stout and glasses of whiskey. An old neighbour of my family would inquire a long time ago maybe 70 years ago or more if the family of the one that died gave ham to the people that called and if they had Wainscott ING that was a timber covering across the bottom of the walls to hide the damp. If someone went to a funeral maybe far away the old woman would inquire if they had ham and Wainscott ING . That would impress her and they were well to do and fine decent people in her book then. Have a look for peterson tobacco pipes made in Dublin on hear. It a good show. I refuse to smoke tobacco these days as its wasteful and bad for the health. I prefer to build up my tools I am pretty much there with metal working and mechanics tools but I want to build up a collection of wood working tools and make some projects in woods mainly a compact enough single axel
Single axel compact enough to be towed by a 1000cc car vardo style wagon with a compact half gas cylinder wood stove. I love the old stuff and I recently bought myself a shandon tweed flat cap made by O'Gorman's of Cork. I also intend on buying some leather working tools as I want to make harness quality belts to keep a bloke or ladies trousers up with decent brass buckles. I recently replaced the prong in my leather belt with a nail. It saved money and it was a problem to solve. An idle mind is the devil's play ground even keeping your stuff tidy and organised is rewarding.
... Or blow bubbles, or whatever. Wonderful. Great to see this level of craftsmanship.
or whatever; Smoking the other godly smokeble plant
I love this man's skill level "it's still very fragile..." as he whacks the excess off with uncaring abandon! He has done this for so long he knows EXACTLY how hard he can push on that pipe without crushing it! You or I try it like he did, we would have a handful of pipe pieces!
much agreed, good sir. ;)
I'm a Potter yes it would be very fragile but you'd be surprised how quickly you can get used to the way to handle fragile greenware. I just went and made a whole bunch of clay tiles for testing glaze they don't look like tiles like you think about them they're like a little l-shaped pad of clay and they're exceedingly thin and I had to trim probably two dozen of them just now and didn't break any I mean you could have literally just flick your finger and break these so easily but you just get used to it. It probably would only take breaking maybe three or four pipes before you get the hang of it the human hand is an amazing amazing amazing thing I doubt that we will ever be able to create a robotics device with enough feedback to mimic our hands all of the physical cues that go back to the brain as we touch different objects is an incredible amount of data
Exactly the person I thought would be making clay pipes
That's another of lifes little questions answered.
Many thanks!
@@patrickglaser1560 & then 'we' the inquisitive once again get drawn in!
Very interesting. I didn't know these were still being made. So glad to see an old craft being done today.
That was so cool,you have to respect and love how he makes pipes the old fashioned way, plus just i like the old man's personality so down to earth.
I wondered how clay pipes were made, now I know, very interesting! Thanks for sharing.
Fascinating! I always assumed they were pour-molded.
Quite a lot of skill involved. Thanks for telling your story.
Not really the real skill is in making the mold
Yes I thought they were slip cast.
Tying your shoe takes more skill.
What a great video, history in action and long may this craftsman continue his wonderful work, thank you for sharing this!
My mum and granny got me one when they went on holiday a few years ago. They gave it to me to blow bubbles and it was good at it! Very well crafted
Fantastic, thanks Mr. Key for taking the time for this. Great fellow to listen to.
This is thrilling! Hand crafting could be a vanishing art. Long live this craft!!
Thrilling...seriously? It's interesting for sure but I couldn't be thrilled by watching an old codger make clay pipes. Get a grip!
Thank you for sharing your craft! I love tobacco pipes of all kinds. I find them beautiful and so many are works of art. I have been intrigued by how clay pipes were created and its nothing near what I expected. You make a good video sir. We are sorely lacking in people willing to continue with the old ways of crafting objects such as pipes.
50 years ago I used to smoke one of those. Lovely sweet taste.
Fortunately I survived. Haven't smoked for 40 years now.
Thanks for sharing! A true craftsman!
I just purchased one from a local maker, they are a wonderfully cool dry smoke and allow the flavors to come through. The older generations knew how to enjoy the finer and simple things in life.
Really interesting video.
Well done "Shropshire Star", and well done Rex for sharing his skills.
I wish you rainbows.
@@patrickglaser1560 No, it's just something I've been saying to people for decades.
I've never thought about it before, but the only thing I can come up with is that my late father used to call me that when I was very small, so maybe it was buried in my subconcious?
Rainbows are beautiful anyway.
@@patrickglaser1560 It was my father, and no he wasn't a church-goer.
Thank you for showing us your skill in pipe making! Really enjoyed it!
I have wanted to see this for about 50 years.
ua-cam.com/video/cK-XgXAzVZ4/v-deo.html
I shared a video from 1952 from the same village of someone making them.
typograf62 Me too! Now I know.....
Yes always wondered how's it done
I hope still made in 50 year from now or even 200 years.
I have some of Rex's pipes. Great to see how he makes them
What a fantastic fellow. It’s only a true expert who can make something look so easy. You are a fantastic man Rex and thank you so much for sharing your skill and experience. To think that these pipes were in use for 300 years or more, with relatively little change to their functional design, is amazing. And then to see one produced really makes all those “field finds” come alive. Thanks Rex
It's great seeing old traditions of crafting and trades like this being kept alive. I hope he has an apprentice or two, as I think it'd be a real shame if this tradition were lost. There are still quite a few pipe smokers, even in my generation (millenials), but most smoke briar pipes. At any rate, although I would've loved to see more, this was a *great* video.
That was awesome!! Thank you for posting. Just saw this today, I know it was posted a year ago.
Your expertise and trade is much admired by us pipers sir
👏👏👏👍
I've dug up broken clay pipes and always wonder how they were made. Thanks for sharing!
This was a great video on an old skill! Very cool! Such craftsmanship around something once so common!
I think it is so sad there is less pride in work done than there used to be.
Thanks. I have smoked clay pipes but did not know how they were made. For the sake of my front teeth, I mostly stick to briar or corn cob pipes.
Having an interest in archaeology, I have seen the skulls of ancient clay pipe smokers and have seem the big notch it wears in your teeth with regular use.
I've seen those very long stemmed clay pipes that were used in pubs. The stem being so long because you break off the very time when using them because they were a communal thing that everyone.used.
part of the big appeal, of course, was that they were always cheap and produced in large numbers.
Thanks much for posting this.
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. My ancestors were pipe makers in Rainford near Liverpool.
Thanks Rex. In my youth I rather fancied a Church Warden pipe, an affectation, but I liked the idea of something I could point with! I'm not a smoker now (probably never really was either) but I still like the graceful, slender lines of the old clay pipes.
I could watch this kind of thing for hours. Excellent!
Brilliant video - I've never seen a clay pipe being made before. Clever chap!
I've been watching mudlarking on the Thames videos. She finds many old clay pipes. I see how easy it is to make them.
Same reason I'm here.
Now we know who's making all those pipes Nicola finds! 😝
2degucitas easy?
@@planetwisconsin9901 But Nicola says all the pipes she finds are at least 100 years old. Could she be mistaken? As they are clearly still being produced, I suspect she could.
@@planetwisconsin9901 Nic is my favourite mudlarker, she's as happy to find a broken bit of crockery as she is to find a diamond ring
A fascinating and informative video. Thank you for posting.
Pretty cool , I've always liked the long stemmed pipes 👍
I have two brand new churchwarden long clay pipes, except they are now 146 yrs old! I pulled them out of a wooden barrel 150ft down on a wreck in Irish sea, in 1993-94. Got them in a glass display case, although commonly found, it's very rare to find complete original old ones 😁
That was an awesome video. I've often wondered how the pipes were made. Thanks for posting. I've found a few bowls while out metal detecting but never a whole one.
I have been wondering exactly how they were made now for a long time. I have worked in foundry up to plastic injection but those pipes have been around for a long time and am really impressed with the mold being hand made without there being an EDM to burn the image into the mold. I am also amazed how so many are thrown into the Thames River and don't understand why. It would seem the life span of a clay pipe is short. I'm 73 and when little I saw my great grandmothers clay pipe. Us older guys need to keep busy , it's good for us,,,,thanks for the video
Clay pipes were cheap. When the stem got broken, or the pipe became soaked with tar and nicotine and foul tasting, it was easy to throw it away and buy a new one. One pipe might only last a couple of weeks. A thrifty smoker might wash an old pipe and put it aside to dry and air for a few weeks but it was never as sweet as new.
@assassinlexx Glazing not necessary and adds to cost. There were some fancy ones that were glazed. I have seen shiny ones that had an invisible picture printed on them. As you smoked the heat made the picture appear, a windmill or a flower or something of that nature.
I've wondered how clay pipes were made. Thank you.
Great work...I love that mold he is working with
Thank you, that was interesting. I did not know they were still being made.
Loved seeing you make a pipe, thanks so much.
Interesting video. They were routinely thrown into the Thames, much like today's discarded cigarette ends, whenever these 'cheap' clay pipes inevitably got blocked and became unusable. Many of them can still be found in the mud today at low tide.
I've dug up dozens of broken clay pipe fragments in gardens over the years, and around a dozen in my own garden alone. It always brings a smile to my face, as I feel the connection to the gardeners of years gone by, who dug the same patch of ground long ago. Sometimes it is clear from the situation they are found, that they were the last person to turn over that sod, or move that stone, and sometimes, like with my own veg plot, they are just one more soul to have worked that soil in an unbroken line of gardening, back through the seasons, in a cycle that probably started as long before them, as they were before us.
I used to find broken bits of these things in Ontario Canada all the time when I worked for an archeology company, it was probably the 2nd most common type of artifact we would find on European settler sites (first being broken ceramics, ie plates and such).
@@mjstecyk It's the flint arrowhead of their time. Sadly, our archeological signature piece will probably be the plastic bottle.
Id find tones of fragments in my local park where they were doing construction, even found an old barely recognisable sickle and handle too
@@JoesWebPresence that is a beautiful thought.
Love the waistcoat and cap, my friend. Informative video as well!
This was a great video, and hyper-interesting content. After all, this is an ancient craft. I see that he made the pipes for everyone in the series: Lark rise to Candelford, and also to the actors (and filmmakers) in the films: Pirates of the Caribbean, as well as countless BBC dramas. Rex Key has been called: a national treasure. He is constantly getting requests to make pipes for people, which I don't think is strange. I should have liked some of his beautiful pipes, even though I don't smoke, which he doesn't do himself either.
I loved this! I have always wondered how to make them, I used to find them when mudlarking here in Sweden.Thinking of making a crude one for myself now :-)
They where usualy imported from England in barrels.
In Nothern Sweden they are quite rare to find, but i still remeber how awsome it was when i found pieces of one in my fathers garden whan i was a little child.
Later i found a few pieces on old shipsites in the sea, probably washed asore pieces seafarers throwed in the water whan it was brooken.
@@sheep1ewe There were lots of broken ones outside Sundsvall, the ships got rid of the ballast there before loading timber. Lots of flintstone as well!
@@MartinAhlman That was interesting, i actualy did a search a few miles from the city some years ago, but i think as You say they are probably concentrated finds to certain locations. I will absolutly hawe another look around those areas in the future! (As well as continue my hunt for weather baloons... ;) )
It's quite annoying that the permission papers for legaly use a metal detector in Sweden cost a small fortune today...
It had been interesting to search the shores for metal parts from the wooden ship era.
@@sheep1ewe Try Klampenborg, the west side :-) And I agree, the fee is way too high for a metal detector. :-(
@@MartinAhlman Thank You for the tip!
Yes, especialy since i just got my self a new high grade detector... But maybe if it where many people who could share the same area with permission it would be more realistic, in Sweden mudlarking does not need any special premission for picking up loose finds, as it (formaly) does in Brittain, as long as one keep it outside protected "historical sites" and there are not metal objects of historical significance in the finds (but if one offer them to the state and they does not want to buy it from You, You are alloved to keep the find, no matter what,´from what i could found, and it only refear to objects made of metal, not objects made of other materials outside marked (or similary protected) sites.).
So, at least from what i could find, i think we hawe a perfectly legal green card for official mudlarking, actualy, and a fine thing in sweden is that it is not only limited to the shores, one only need the elandowners formaly premission to dig in the ground and move rocks, nothing else outside marked areas, så You are basically free to search everywhere as long as it does not collide with any other regulations.
Great! I used to wonder how they were made. Elegantly simple proces.
This is SO COOL! Cheers from Upper Kanada!
brilliant video i never knew this is how they were made, not sure what i thought tbh. i find so many of these on the river.
What an interesting video and an awesome talent. Thank you for showing this
I was wondering how they were made. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you so much, great demonstration!
I love this. Thank you for the tutorial. I would really enjoy making pipes like this.
Thank you, that is just beautifully made!
I have several old clays. One was a trade item for North American fur trade. Great little smokers, but the bowl gets too hot to hold.
This was nice to watch !
I learned 2 new words from this video...Flagile, and Throusand. Very educational indeed!
Really fascinating ! I Watch mudlarkers find many old pipes ans wondered how they were made ! thank you
Lovely post. Here from Thames Mud larking. Thank you sir.
Wow, thank you so much for this video. You should continue this story, I think
I especially loved your personal stamp.
Thank you so much for this wonderful video!
Wonderfull. Thank you. ...... only in Shropshire!
That was very interesting. Thanks
Glad to see they are still using 'centigrade' as a unit of measurement.
Wow. I often wondered what the process was.
I would have liked to see the finish pip but still a great job 👍
All i want to know is how do i get myself one of these
Very cool. How does one purchase one of his clay pipes?
That was super-cool! Wonderful! - T
How would you even get into this this day and age, the moulds must be fairly hard to get hold of for one.. great video
You can always 3D print the mold or carve out a mold of your pipe out of clay and cast it (After firing it) in sand for smelting an aluminium mold of your pipe.
I was thinking same thing, one is not going to find a mould via Amazon. I do think creating a mould out of plaster would be a bit easier. One would need to jimmy rig the wire piece he has as well as that piece he inserted to flesh out the bowl. But I do think this is doable.
@@mejia81004 One could even hand carve it all out of wood, if one has enough patience.
Just for personal preference and bragging rights it would be nice to have original moulds though instead of modern day 3d printed stuff.. not that it would do a better job either way... Just like a set of calipers ive got from 1888 made by d kimberly and sons... You just imagine all the hands theyve been through over the years etc... Or it might just be me... Ha
@@tonysolar284, I have a little home hobby type setup for pottery and aluminium casting and am tempted to try that. the most difficult thing is deciding on a design, it has to be attractive enough to justify the effort. Something to do whilst isolating.
What did they use to fire up pipes back then, in pre 18th century?
Fantastic vid. Thanks to all there 👏👍👌
Yes, when I was a child we used them to blow bubbles.
Thx, and didn't realize it was that simple... might be time to get some clay and print a 3D pipe mold!
Easy to make the pipe. Who makes the mould though. That would be where the skill lays
Jamie Nightingale , I was thinking the same thing , I hope their name is on it as well.
A tool and die maker.
It may look easy because he has been doing it for 50 years
@@petersoal40 Naw. It's easy. I'm a skilled craftsman, this is unskilled labor. Anyone who is good with their hands could pick this up in 5 minutes or less.
peter soal he said woman and children commonly performed this process. It’s not like he’s sculpting wooden pipes, just filling a mold and trimming it.
I have an antique seafoam eagle's claw pipe😃
One of them claypipes i want for years....
I had assumed they were made with slip molding. This is very interesting
😯 wow! Awesome, Mr.
Wonderful video. 48 years ago I bought a clay pipe in Williamsburg, VA, and I suspect it was made by this company.
Where can I buy one?
Just found a broken pipe, here in the old goldfields of Tungamull, near Rockhampton Qld. Has a 'crest' on the bowl, side that you see when smoking.
Any one for any ideas for "Maker Identification", who, where to go...?
Thank you for this. Could you please tell us the function of the little heel bump that so many clay pipes feature at the bottom of the stem near the bowl? Thanks again.
Helps to keep the hot bowl from burning the table when "resting" the pipe.
Where do you find the iron pipe molds? I do clay pottery on a wheel but would like to try this, too. I smoke pipes and have a couple clay ones.
Do you know where I can get a mold like that? I’ve been search the web far and wide and can’t find anything.
willdiscover I’m looking too. I found some online but they sell out. I’m going to check in local thrift stores too. I’m in Pennsylvania in coal country. I’m sure they have em. If not , hand rolled pipes and outside smoking makes them Native American pipes
Very interesting I like these type of learning videos.
This man needs to create a new Shropshire tradition of Chillums, what a great niche market with all the buzz around legalization.
Beautiful!
could you add a glaze to these and still smoke from them??
Brilliant, nice to see, thanks
how and where can i get tool´s to make clay pibes ??, i live in denmark ;0)))
a British lady with a UA-cam channel called "nicola white mudlark - Tideline Art" she walks the Thames river regularly and finds all kinds of old treasures there including clay pipes some of them 100 year old, since the mold is of the same age, maybe those old recovered pipes were made with this same mold from a pipe make a century ago.....
Can you use them for the WEEDS????
Blowing bubbles ❤️
That looks like something I could do. Where can I get those metal molds? There was an old pipe maker along the Ohio River not far from where I live & clay is abundant here in KY. Great video. Thanks. 👍☮️🌞
I wonder how many of these you'd have to make in a day to put bread on the table?
You wouldn't put bread on that table with all those bits of clay on it,😉
I don't smoke, but after watching those mudlarking along the Thames videos and the uniqueness of these (both historic and aesthetic) make me want to get one anyways.
Where did the molds come from and how old are they?
Beautiful what a beautiful pipe. I want one I love to smoke a Clay Pipe .Thank you for the video . You Sir are a Amazing Man . God bless please let me know how to contact you for a pipe
Can you use these for crack? Asking for a friend.
So are you able to directly smoke out of them, or do you have to put some sort of varnish over the clay first?
They are heated and hardened in a kiln then possibly glazed.
No varnish or glaze just plain white clay. My grandfather sometimes got fancy ones that had a shiny finish, they had a design printed on them like a windmill or a flower. This was invisible when the pipe was new but slowly developed as he smoked it and it darkened.
I've seen some old stems with a red wax-like finish on the mouth end but the majority are untreated.
Can we buy these?
Lovely video. In rural Ireland at wakes the mourners were given clay pipes full of tobacco and bottles stout and glasses of whiskey. An old neighbour of my family would inquire a long time ago maybe 70 years ago or more if the family of the one that died gave ham to the people that called and if they had Wainscott ING that was a timber covering across the bottom of the walls to hide the damp. If someone went to a funeral maybe far away the old woman would inquire if they had ham and Wainscott ING . That would impress her and they were well to do and fine decent people in her book then. Have a look for peterson tobacco pipes made in Dublin on hear. It a good show. I refuse to smoke tobacco these days as its wasteful and bad for the health. I prefer to build up my tools I am pretty much there with metal working and mechanics tools but I want to build up a collection of wood working tools and make some projects in woods mainly a compact enough single axel
Single axel compact enough to be towed by a 1000cc car vardo style wagon with a compact half gas cylinder wood stove. I love the old stuff and I recently bought myself a shandon tweed flat cap made by O'Gorman's of Cork. I also intend on buying some leather working tools as I want to make harness quality belts to keep a bloke or ladies trousers up with decent brass buckles. I recently replaced the prong in my leather belt with a nail. It saved money and it was a problem to solve. An idle mind is the devil's play ground even keeping your stuff tidy and organised is rewarding.