https://pipedia.org/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=TseHa&feedformat=atomPipedia - User contributions [en]2024-03-29T07:01:05ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.39.6https://pipedia.org/index.php?title=American_Pipe_Brands_%26_Makers_E_-_F&diff=9201American Pipe Brands & Makers E - F2008-10-14T13:27:19Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>{|<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">E</font>'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[E. Andrew Briars]]'''||Edward Andrew Jurkiewicz; Milwaukee, WI.<br />
|-<br />
|'''E. Oslo'''||Robert Eugene "Mic" Burns (ret.), Long Beach, CA. '''→ [[Micoli]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Ed's Hand Made'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Edward's]]'''||Edward's Pipe Shops, various makers.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Eells]]'''||John H. Eells; Richmond, VA.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Ehrlich's]]'''||Ehrlich's; Boston, MA. See also George '''[[Bushee]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''El Morjane'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Ensslen]]'''||Bob Ensslen; Cresco, PA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Elliott Pipes]]'''||Skip Elliott (The Briary); Homewood, AL.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Ellison]]'''||Dick Ellison; ?, CO. See also '''[[Edward's]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Emperor'''||'''[[Continental Briar Pipe Co.]]'''; New York City.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Erickson]]'''||Ken Erickson; Sunland, CA.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Evan Handmade Briars]]'''||Mark „Evan“ Schloemer; Rozel, KS.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">F</font>'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fader]]'''||Private label pipes for Fader's Tobacco shop; Baltimore, MD. Partially made by '''[[Shalom Pipe Factory]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fairchild'''||'''[[Don Fairchild]]'''; Bellaire, TX.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fairchild'''||'''[[Ron Fairchild]]'''; Houston, TX.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fauscette'''||Michael Fauscette; Discovery Bay, CA. See '''[[Delta Pipes]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Feinstein]]'''||Bill Feinstein (†)<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fillenwarth Pipes]]'''||Tony Fillenwarth; Mazon, IL.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fischer]]'''||House of Fischer; New York City.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fletcher's]]'''||Cullen Fletcher; Chicago, IL.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Florov Pipes]]'''||Alex Florov (ex Russia); Round Lake, IL.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Forecaster]]'''||'''[[National Briar Pipe Co.]]'''; Jersey City, NJ.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fortnums Winward]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Frank'''||'''[[S.M. Frank & Co. Inc.]]'''; Peekskill, NY.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Frank'''||'''[[Wally Frank]]'''; New York City,<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Frederick G Pipes]]'''||Frederick Garlinghouse (†); Carthage, TN.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Freedom Smoking Pipe]]'''||Adam Hirshan; Intervale, NJ.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[French Briar Horn]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Frey]]'''||Michael J. Frey; Lockport, NY.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Friebe]]'''||Herbert Friebe; Southfield, MI.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fuhr]]'''||Don Fuhr<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fuller'''||Tim C. Fuller; ?, ID. See '''[[TC Fuller Pipes]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Back to''' [[American Pipe Brands & Makers C - D]] '''or continue to''' [[American Pipe Brands & Makers G - H]] '''!'''</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Micoli&diff=9200Micoli2008-10-14T13:19:48Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Micoli''' were made by '''Robert Eugene Burns''', Long Beach, CA. Burns carved pipes in his unique and unmistakable way at least from the early 1970's. Last news about him dates from November 2001, when his son Ryan Burns answered to inquires that his father is still very much alive and is in excellent health and he seemed interested that people are still asking about his work.<br />
<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Micoli_01.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_01b.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_03a.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_03b.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_05.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_05a.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_13.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_13a.jpg<br />
</gallery></center><br />
<br />
The signature of Burns' work is the specific way of rustication he worked out using a Dremel power tool. (The Dremel had been introduced to pipemaking by [[Teddy Knudsen]].) An award winning collection of 130+ Micoli pipes is offered at [http://www.pipestyle.com/micoli.htm PipeStyle] - please take a look!<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Image:Micoli_EO01.jpg|right|250px]]<br />
Burns / Micoli also made the '''E. Oslo''' pipes. These can be considered his entry-level pipes as he did not carve these from scratch but rather purchased run-of-the-mill standard shapes from Italian and English pipe makers, such as [[Savinelli]] and [[Comoy's]], and dremeled his signature magic on them. The pipe shown was very likely a Savinelli 111 KS.<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color: red">Please add further information!</span><br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Micoli&diff=9199Micoli2008-10-14T13:18:16Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Micoli''' were made by '''Robert Eugene Burns''', Long Beach, CA. Burns carved pipes in his unique and unmistakable way at least from the early 1970's. Last news about him dates from November 2001, when his son Ryan Burns answered to inquires that his father is still very much alive and is in excellent health and he seemed interested that people are still asking about his work.<br />
<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Micoli_01.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_01b.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_03a.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_03b.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_05.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_05a.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_13.jpg<br />
Image:Micoli_13a.jpg<br />
</gallery></center><br />
<br />
The signature of Burns' work is the specific way of rustication he worked out using a Dremel power tool. (The Dremel had been introduced to pipemaking by [[Teddy Knudsen]].) An award winning collection of 130+ Micoli pipes is offered at [http://www.pipestyle.com/micoli.htm PipeStyle] - please take a look!<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Image:Micoli_EO01.jpg|right|250px]]<br />
Burns / Micoli also made the '''E. OSLO''' pipes. These can be considered his entry-level pipes as he did not carve these from scratch but rather purchased run-of-the-mill standard shapes from Italian and English pipe makers, such as [[Savinelli]] and [[Comoy's]], and dremeled his signature magic on them. The pipe shown was very likely a Savinelli 111 KS.<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color: red">Please add further information!</span><br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Micoli_EO01.jpg&diff=9198File:Micoli EO01.jpg2008-10-14T12:56:33Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Ehrlich%27s&diff=9195Ehrlich's2008-10-14T12:32:11Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div><font size="4">'''The David P. Ehrlich story'''</font><br />
<br />
'''Pipemakers and Tobacconists for a Hundred Years, 1868-1968.''' <br />
<br />
The David P. Ehrlich Company has remained solely in the hands of one family during its century of business, yet it has had several firm names and locations. David P. Ehrlich went to work in 1881 at the age of twenty for Ferdinand Abraham, who dealt in cigars and tobacco and who had begun business in 1868 at 1188 Washington Street in the South End, but in 1880 moved to the center of the city, where the firm has been ever since. David Ehrlich married the boss's daughter. In 1916 the name became the David P. Ehrlich Company and Mr. Ehrlich devoted the rest of his life to this business. Since David's death in 1912 it has been owned by - his nieces and nephews including Richard A. and William Ehrlich. <br />
<br />
The Ehrlich shop has since 1880 had a predilection for historic sites. 25 Court Street was close to the spot where from 1721-1726 James Franklin had, with the assistance of his brother Benjamin, published The New-England Courant. In 1908 the firm moved a few doors up Court Street to number 37, on the opposite corner of the alley that is grandiloquently named Franklin Avenue. This new locution was on the site of the one-time printing office of Edes and Gill, publishers of the Boston Gazette, in whose back room some of the "Indians" of the Boston Tea Party assumed their disguises. Soon after the end of World War II at which time the store was located at 33 Court Street a move around the corner to 207 Washington Street brought the shop diagonally across from the Old State House and onto the site occupied from 1610-1808 by the First Church of Boston. The demolition of 207 Washington Street in 1967 caused still another move to 32 Tremont Street, adjoining King's Chapel burying Ground, which is the oldest cemetery in Boston. <br />
<br />
The David P. Ehrlich Co. has not just occupied sites intimately associated with Boston history and institutions; it has in the past century become a Boston institution in its own right. It has specialized in fine cigars, pipes, and pipe tobacco. In addition to the retail business, the firm has long specialized in the manufacture of pipes, both from Algerian briar root and from meerschaum, a beautiful white fossilized substance, mined from the earth in Turkish Asia Minor. Meerschaum lends itself to carving, and in the nineteenth century there developed in Austria a fashion for carving pipes from it with formidably intricate decoration. <br />
<br />
The Ehrlichs have long had meerschaum carvers, who ply their craft in the shop window to the delight of passersby. For years the bearded Gustave Fischer was a familiar figure in the window at 33 Court Street. A succession of craftsmen have continued the tradition. and still make and repair pipes in the window of the new Tremont Street shop. They still turn their meerschaum pipes by hand on a foot operated wooden lathe made in Austria about 1871. Although briars are today turned on power lathes, meerschaum can only be turned on a foot-operated lathe. <br />
<br />
As amber was used for the bits in his better pipes, David P. Ehrlich found himself in the amber business as a side line. For years the firm has been noted for amber jewelry in its many types and forms, often purchasing old examples from estates to maintain its large and varied assortment. And with the meerschaum and die amber as a nucleus, a variety of artifacts dealing with tobacco and smoking, as well as prints of Boston have come to decorate the shop. There is a display case in the Boston Museum of Science donated by David P. Ehrlich Company which outlines the story of amber. <br />
<br />
Many of the mahogany display cases that were installed in Court Street early in the century have been transplanted to Washington and then to Tremont Streets, so that the present premises, although new, have a strong family resemblance to those that we knew on our earliest visits to Ehrlich's. This is good sense in Boston, where people do not welcome needless change for its own sake. <br />
<br />
In 1956 when the old Harvard Square firm of Leavitt and Peirce was offered for sale, the Ehrlich brothers, because of their Harvard connections, could not resist acquiring it. Richard A. Ehrlich was a member of the class of 1922; his brother William of 1925. As they had known for years this seventy-year-old establishment, which had done business in the same location in Harvard Square longer than any except the College itself, they took it over, with the idea of keeping it as it was, even to the metal ceiling. In 1958, to celebrate its 75th anniversary, David McCord edited for them an engaging volume entitled 75 Aromatic Years of Leavitt & Peirce in the Recollection of 31 Harvard Men . And as Leavitt & Peirce is to Harvard College, so is the even older David P. Ehrlich Co. to Boston - the purveyor of “a brand of special knowledge" built up over a century of honest dealing. <br />
<br />
The January 1968 issue of Antiques Magazine carried a feature by Wendell D. Garrett titled "Paraphernalia of smokers and snuffers" describing in considerable detail the impressive collection of paraphernalia and smokers articles from many countries and centuries on permanent exhibit in their Leavitt & Peirce Cambridge tobacco shop. The Boston Public Library in Copley Square devoted twenty-five display cases during the month of January to the David P. Ehrlich Company Centennial Exhibition of Tobacciana made up of the Leavitt & Peirce antique collection, the David P. Ehrlich collection of carved meerschaum pipes and their two venerable Cigar Store Indians. <br />
<br />
There are pipes of every price and size and shape, from good ordinary smoking pipes up to briars of the finest grain and meerschaums band cut, turned and polished front the best Turkish blocks. This is in keeping with a catalogue statement: “we have never ceased to regard smoking as an exquisite pleasure, rather than a mere habit." Another of the principles of the firm is embodied in the observation: "we are pipe makers - not plumbers. There are no tricky gadgets in Ehrlich pipes." But when a man drops his pipe, the makers will transform themselves into repairmen in a highly efficient manner. All this has been going on for a century, and we confidently trust that it will outlast our time, and then some.<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Ehrlich_02.jpg|<br />
Image:Ehrlich_02b.jpg|<br />
</gallery></center><br />
<br />
'''George Bushee''' was Ehrlich’s last pipemaker. During the 1970s and early 1980s he finished a number of bowls which were turned somewhere around 1903 to 1913 by Ehrlich’s of Boston and…had been forgotten. Some seventy years later, they were discovered by Bushee who would finish them when he wasn’t working on one of his own pipes. All were finished to their period specifications and Bushee would look out for period stems and bands to keep the pipe as it might have appeared at the turn of the 20th Century. The pipe shown above was one of the last pipes he made, as he had been looking for the right gold band to place on this pipe for years. As these bowls were made by someone else, he did not place is initials "GP" on them, even if he finished them.<br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Egloff&diff=9194Egloff2008-10-14T11:59:25Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>Thera isn't much useful information about the pipes of '''Peter Egloff'''. The general description of his pipes is "mainly classical and light weighted shapes". <br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Egloff_02.jpg|<br />
Image:Egloff_02a.jpg|<br />
</gallery></center><br />
Anyhow, the Egloff Tobaccobar AG - tobacco shop, production and sale of tobacco pipes and trade with smoker's implements - decided upon dissolution and requested the deletion from the trade register of the Canton of Luzern in May 2007.<br />
<br />
The domicile was Burgerstrasse 17, CH - 6003 Luzern.<br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: Switzerland]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Ehrlich_02.jpg&diff=9193File:Ehrlich 02.jpg2008-10-14T11:25:27Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Ehrlich_02b.jpg&diff=9192File:Ehrlich 02b.jpg2008-10-14T11:25:07Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Egloff_02.jpg&diff=9191File:Egloff 02.jpg2008-10-14T11:24:37Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Egloff_02a.jpg&diff=9190File:Egloff 02a.jpg2008-10-14T11:24:04Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Ehrlich%27s&diff=9189Ehrlich's2008-10-14T10:47:25Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>The David P. Ehrlich story <br />
<br />
Pipemakers and Tobacconists for a Hundred Years, 1868-1968. <br />
<br />
The David P. Ehrlich Company has remained solely in the hands of one family during its century of business, yet it has had several firm names and locations. David P. Ehrlich went to work in 1881 at the age of twenty for Ferdinand Abraham, who dealt in cigars and tobacco and who had begun business in 1868 at 1188 Washington Street in the South End, but in 1880 moved to the center of the city, where the firm has been ever since. David Ehrlich married the boss's daughter. In 1916 the name became the David P. Ehrlich Company and Mr. Ehrlich devoted the rest of his life to this business. Since David's death in 1912 it has been owned by - his nieces and nephews including Richard A. and William Ehrlich. <br />
<br />
The Ehrlich shop has since 1880 had a predilection for historic sites. 25 Court Street was close to the spot where from 1721-1726 James Franklin had, with the assistance of his brother Benjamin, published The New-England Courant. In 1908 the firm moved a few doors up Court Street to number 37, on the opposite corner of the alley that is grandiloquently named Franklin Avenue. This new locution was on the site of the one-time printing office of Edes and Gill, publishers of the Boston Gazette, in whose back room some of the "Indians" of the Boston Tea Party assumed their disguises. Soon after the end of World War II at which time the store was located at 33 Court Street a move around the corner to 207 Washington Street brought the shop diagonally across from the Old State House and onto the site occupied from 1610-1808 by the First Church of Boston. The demolition of 207 Washington Street in 1967 caused still another move to 32 Tremont Street, adjoining King's Chapel burying Ground, which is the oldest cemetery in Boston. <br />
<br />
The David P. Ehrlich Co. has not just occupied sites intimately associated with Boston history and institutions; it has in the past century become a Boston institution in its own right. It has specialized in fine cigars, pipes, and pipe tobacco. In addition to the retail business, the firm has long specialized in the manufacture of pipes, both from Algerian briar root and from meerschaum, a beautiful white fossilized substance, mined from the earth in Turkish Asia Minor. Meerschaum lends itself to carving, and in the nineteenth century there developed in Austria a fashion for carving pipes from it with formidably intricate decoration. <br />
<br />
The Ehrlichs have long had meerschaum carvers, who ply their craft in the shop window to the delight of passersby. For years the bearded Gustave Fischer was a familiar figure in the window at 33 Court Street. A succession of craftsmen have continued the tradition. and still make and repair pipes in the window of the new Tremont Street shop. They still turn their meerschaum pipes by hand on a foot operated wooden lathe made in Austria about 1871. Although briars are today turned on power lathes, meerschaum can only be turned on a foot-operated lathe. <br />
<br />
As amber was used for the bits in his better pipes, David P. Ehrlich found himself in the amber business as a side line. For years the firm has been noted for amber jewelry in its many types and forms, often purchasing old examples from estates to maintain its large and varied assortment. And with the meerschaum and die amber as a nucleus, a variety of artifacts dealing with tobacco and smoking, as well as prints of Boston have come to decorate the shop. There is a display case in the Boston Museum of Science donated by David P. Ehrlich Company which outlines the story of amber. <br />
<br />
Many of the mahogany display cases that were installed in Court Street early in the century have been transplanted to Washington and then to Tremont Streets, so that the present premises, although new, have a strong family resemblance to those that we knew on our earliest visits to Ehrlich's. This is good sense in Boston, where people do not welcome needless change for its own sake. <br />
<br />
In 1956 when the old Harvard Square firm of Leavitt and Peirce was offered for sale, the Ehrlich brothers, because of their Harvard connections, could not resist acquiring it. Richard A. Ehrlich was a member of the class of 1922; his brother William of 1925. As they had known for years this seventy-year-old establishment, which had done business in the same location in Harvard Square longer than any except the College itself, they took it over, with the idea of keeping it as it was, even to the metal ceiling. In 1958, to celebrate its 75th anniversary, David McCord edited for them an engaging volume entitled 75 Aromatic Years of Leavitt & Peirce in the Recollection of 31 Harvard Men . And as Leavitt & Peirce is to Harvard College, so is the even older David P. Ehrlich Co. to Boston - the purveyor of “a brand of special knowledge" built up over a century of honest dealing. <br />
<br />
The January 1968 issue of Antiques Magazine carried a feature by Wendell D. Garrett titled "Paraphernalia of smokers and snuffers" describing in considerable detail the impressive collection of paraphernalia and smokers articles from many countries and centuries on permanent exhibit in their Leavitt & Peirce Cambridge tobacco shop. The Boston Public Library in Copley Square devoted twenty-five display cases during the month of January to the David P. Ehrlich Company Centennial Exhibition of Tobacciana made up of the Leavitt & Peirce antique collection, the David P. Ehrlich collection of carved meerschaum pipes and their two venerable Cigar Store Indians. <br />
<br />
There are pipes of every price and size and shape, from good ordinary smoking pipes up to briars of the finest grain and meerschaums band cut, turned and polished front the best Turkish blocks. This is in keeping with a catalogue statement: “we have never ceased to regard smoking as an exquisite pleasure, rather than a mere habit." Another of the principles of the firm is embodied in the observation: "we are pipe makers - not plumbers. There are no tricky gadgets in Ehrlich pipes." But when a man drops his pipe, the makers will transform themselves into repairmen in a highly efficient manner. All this has been going on for a century, and we confidently trust that it will outlast our time, and then some.<br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=American_Pipe_Brands_%26_Makers_L_-_M&diff=9188American Pipe Brands & Makers L - M2008-10-14T10:36:53Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>{|<br />
|'''<font size="4">L</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Laird]]'''||Ted Laird; Brooklyn Park, MN<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Lakatosh]]'''||John Lakatosh; New Columbia, PA<br />
|-<br />
|'''Larsen'''||Wally Larsen (†); St. Paul, MN. See '''[[Senlar]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''LaRue'''||Travor LaRue (†) & Chuck Whitmore; Langley (Whidbey Island), WA. See '''[[Whidbey Islander Pipes]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Laughingmoon Pipes]]'''||Robert Vacher; Litchfield, CA.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Lazy S Pipes'''||'''[[R.C. Sands]]'''; Reynoldsburg, OH<br />
|-<br />
|'''LDG'''||Larry D. '''[[Goff]]<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Learned]]'''||Samuel Learned; York, PA.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Lee]]'''||Lee; New York City. Any context with '''Briar Lee'''???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Leese'''||Jack Leese; New York City. See '''[[Air-Vent]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[LePeltier]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Lewis]]'''||Rich Lewis; Minneapolis, MN<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[LHS]]'''||L. & H. Stern Pipe Making Company; Brooklyn, NY<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Lindner]]'''||Michael Lindner; Rochester Hills, MI<br />
|-<br />
|'''Linkman'''||'''[[M. Linkman & Co.]]''' (MLC); Chicago, IL.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Lips Pipeworks]]'''||Thomas J. Lips; Portland, OR<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[LOG]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Lord Davenport Pipes]]'''||Lord Davenport Pipes Ltd.; New York City. Known from the 1940's.<br />
|-<br />
| ||[[Image:Lord-Davenport.jpg|50px]] | <br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Loscalzo Pipes]]'''||Craig A. Loscalzo; Lexington, KY.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[LPI]]'''||Barry Levin († 1994); ? VT<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Luna Pipes]]'''||Tom Johnson, Bothell (Seattle), WA.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Lynch]]'''||O.E. Lynch<br />
|-<br />
| ||[[Image:Lynch_1.jpg|50px]] | [[Image:Lynch_2.jpg|50px]] | [[Image:Lynch_3.jpg|50px]] | <br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">M</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[M. Linkman & Co.]]'''||MLC; Chicago, IL<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[M.E. Stone Pipes]]'''||M.E. Stone<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Malaga Pipe Company]]'''||Also mentioned as '''Malaga Briarworks'''. G. Khoubesser (1939), Emanual "Manny" Khoubesser. Royal Oak, MI.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Manges]]'''||Rick Manges; Midland, MI<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Manhattan Briar Pipe Co.]]'''||See '''[[S.M. Frank]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Marchetti Pipes]]'''||Phil DeFant; Brooklyn, MI.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mariner]]'''||Joe Mariner (ret.); Napa, CA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Marks]]'''||Andrew Marks; Middlebury, VT<br />
|-<br />
|'''Martin'''||'''[[Sam Martin]]''' († 1992); Little Rock, AR<br />
|-<br />
| ||[[Image:MartinS_07.jpg|50px]] | [[Image:MartinS_08.jpg|50px]] | <br />
|-<br />
| ||'''Thomas Martin'''; Beverly, MA. See '''[[TM Pipes]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Martin Pipe Company]]'''||Hal Silverstein († 2003)<br />
|-<br />
| ||[[Image:MartinPCo_1.jpg|50px]] | <br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Marxman]]'''||Robert L. Marx († 1992); New York City<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mastercraft]]'''||Robert L. Marx († 1992); New York City<br />
|-<br />
|'''Mayflower'''||'''[[National Briar Pipe Co.]]'''; Jersey City, NJ.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[McBride]]'''||Mac McBride (ret./† ?); ?, CA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[http://www.mccranies.com/pipes_mccranie.html McCranie Pipes]'''||Private label brand of McCranie's; Charlotte, NC. Made by Tonino [[Jacono]] and Bill [[Ashton]]-Taylor.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[McCravey]]'''||W.L. McCravey (ret./† ?); Sunnyside, WA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[McGuire]]'''||? McGuire (ret./† ?)<br />
|-<br />
|'''McNulty'''||Brian McNulty; Culver City, CA. See '''[[Anima Pipes]]'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Medico]]'''||'''[[S.M. Frank]]'''; Peekskill, NY<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mehaffey]]'''||E.A. Mehaffey; Wheaton, MD<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mesa Woodsman]]'''||Hugo Mesa (ret./† ?)<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[MelloPure]]'''||Dr. Harry Paine<br />
|-<br />
|'''Melrose'''||'''[[Kaufman Brothers & Bondy]]'''; New York City.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Mermet'''||'''[[Andre Mermet]]'''; New York City, New York & San Francisco, CA<br />
|-<br />
| ||'''[[Jimmy Mermet]]'''; San Francisco, CA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mickles]]'''||Clarence Mickles (†), Park Forest, IL<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Micoli]]'''||Robert Eugene "Mic" Burns (ret.), Long Beach, CA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Milton]]'''||Herb Milton (ret./† ?); Margate, FL<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mincer]]'''||Tracy Mincer († 1966). Custom-Bilt, The Doodler. Indianapolis, IN.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Missouri Meerschaum]]'''||Missouri Meerschaum Company; Washington, MO<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mock]]'''||Don Mock (†)<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Montgomery]] Handmade Pipes'''||Jeremiah W. Montgomery; Hollidaysburg, PA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Morgan Pipes]]'''||Chris Morgan; San Jose, CA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mr. Groum]]'''||James H. Margroum (†); Hanover, PA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Mr. Paul's Pipes]]'''||Paul Speaks (ret./† ?); Baltimore, MD<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Murado]]'''||John Murado<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Back to''' [[American Pipe Brands & Makers I - K]] '''or continue to''' [[American Pipe Brands & Makers N - Q]] '''!'''</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Malaga_Briarworks&diff=9187Malaga Briarworks2008-10-14T10:32:24Z<p>TseHa: Malaga Briarworks moved to Malaga Pipe Company</p>
<hr />
<div>#REDIRECT [[Malaga Pipe Company]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Malaga_Pipe_Company&diff=9186Malaga Pipe Company2008-10-14T10:32:23Z<p>TseHa: Malaga Briarworks moved to Malaga Pipe Company</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Malaga_04a.jpg|right]]<br />
The '''Malaga Pipe Company''' was located in Royal Oak, Michigan at 1406 East Eleven Mile road. The third generation owner's name was '''Emanuel Khoubesser'''. Everyone knew him as "Manny". He was a big jovial man that was easy to converse with, always had a smile and a good joke to tell his very loyal customers. He had the ability to befriend anyone within minutes. The small store was packed with curious customers every Saturday morning looking for the latest design made earlier in the week. <br />
He also carried a full line of custom mixed tobaccos that you could sample and an array tobaccos in tins.<br />
<br />
I was first introduced to him in 1969. I remember him taking me in the back to show me each step involved in pipe making. He was very serious about the quality of the product he sold and would never sell a flawed pipe, even if it was very minor. My step father purchased several of his pipes and really enjoyed them. He once said he's never found a better pipe (his words).<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Malaga_01.jpg|<br />
Image:Malaga_02.jpg|<br />
Image:Malaga_03.jpg|<br />
Image:Malaga_04.jpg|<br />
</gallery></center><br />
Unfortunately, Manny passed away around 1996 and his son was not interested in keeping the business going. The building still exists on Eleven mile, looking almost like it did back then, but now houses the Michigan Toy Soldier Company. I would think the pipes Manny produced are now more valuable than ever. If you happen across one of these pipes, you'll know a little bit more about it's rich history. <br />
Enjoy!<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
(Unconfirmed) notes:<br />
* The Malaga Pipe Company was also mentioned as '''Malaga Briarworks'''.<br />
* The company is reported to be founded in Madison Heights, MI.<br />
* For 1939 a Mr. '''G. Khoubesser''' is mentioned.<br />
* A Mr. '''Tom Nash''' was mentioned in context with the Malaga Pipe Company.<br />
* Former President '''Gerald Ford''' was known to smoke pipes from the Malaga Pipe Company.<br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Malaga_Pipe_Company&diff=9185Malaga Pipe Company2008-10-14T10:31:53Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>[[Image:Malaga_04a.jpg|right]]<br />
The '''Malaga Pipe Company''' was located in Royal Oak, Michigan at 1406 East Eleven Mile road. The third generation owner's name was '''Emanuel Khoubesser'''. Everyone knew him as "Manny". He was a big jovial man that was easy to converse with, always had a smile and a good joke to tell his very loyal customers. He had the ability to befriend anyone within minutes. The small store was packed with curious customers every Saturday morning looking for the latest design made earlier in the week. <br />
He also carried a full line of custom mixed tobaccos that you could sample and an array tobaccos in tins.<br />
<br />
I was first introduced to him in 1969. I remember him taking me in the back to show me each step involved in pipe making. He was very serious about the quality of the product he sold and would never sell a flawed pipe, even if it was very minor. My step father purchased several of his pipes and really enjoyed them. He once said he's never found a better pipe (his words).<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Malaga_01.jpg|<br />
Image:Malaga_02.jpg|<br />
Image:Malaga_03.jpg|<br />
Image:Malaga_04.jpg|<br />
</gallery></center><br />
Unfortunately, Manny passed away around 1996 and his son was not interested in keeping the business going. The building still exists on Eleven mile, looking almost like it did back then, but now houses the Michigan Toy Soldier Company. I would think the pipes Manny produced are now more valuable than ever. If you happen across one of these pipes, you'll know a little bit more about it's rich history. <br />
Enjoy!<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
(Unconfirmed) notes:<br />
* The Malaga Pipe Company was also mentioned as '''Malaga Briarworks'''.<br />
* The company is reported to be founded in Madison Heights, MI.<br />
* For 1939 a Mr. '''G. Khoubesser''' is mentioned.<br />
* A Mr. '''Tom Nash''' was mentioned in context with the Malaga Pipe Company.<br />
* Former President '''Gerald Ford''' was known to smoke pipes from the Malaga Pipe Company.<br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Malaga_01.jpg&diff=9184File:Malaga 01.jpg2008-10-14T09:55:56Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Malaga_02.jpg&diff=9183File:Malaga 02.jpg2008-10-14T09:55:36Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Malaga_03.jpg&diff=9182File:Malaga 03.jpg2008-10-14T09:55:17Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Malaga_04.jpg&diff=9181File:Malaga 04.jpg2008-10-14T09:54:56Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Malaga_04a.jpg&diff=9180File:Malaga 04a.jpg2008-10-14T09:54:32Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Threeton&diff=9159Threeton2008-10-08T17:32:35Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div><font size="4">'''Robert Threeton'''</font> is probably retired / quit pipemaking. <span style="color: red">Please add information!</span> <br />
<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Threeton_01.jpg|<br />
Image:Threeton_03.jpg|<br />
Image:Threeton_05.jpg|<br />
</gallery></center><br />
Cited from the website:<br />
<br />
"Welcome to Threeton Pipes. I created this site to share my hobby with fellow pipe enthusiasts, and to showcase the pipes I've made. I hope you will stay a while and look around, and if you have any comments or suggestions, please e-mail me.<br />
<br />
I first became interested in pipes as a Civil War re-enactor in South Carolina. I purchased a small meerschaum pipe as a prop, and before long I became interested in collecting pipes. It was only a matter of time before I turned my love of woodworking towards making my own pipes.<br />
<br />
While pipemaking is only a hobby for me, I do offer some of my pipes for sale....that is, when I can find the spare time to make them! I use aged Grecian briar for all of my pipes, and unless noted, all feature vulcanite stems."<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Threeton_06.jpg|<br />
Image:Threeton_04.jpg|<br />
Image:Threeton_02.jpg|<br />
</gallery></center><br />
<br />
<br />
'''Contact information:'''<br />
: Robert Threeton<br />
: Exeter (?), New Hampshire<br />
: USA<br />
<br />
: Tel.: <br />
: Fax: <br />
: E-mail: [mailto:threetonpipes@earthlink.net threetonpipes@earthlink.net]<br />
: Website: [http://www.threetonpipes.com/ Threeton Pipes] <span style="color: red">(Currently down!)</span><br />
: Retailer: [http://www.happyjacksonline.com/index.html Happy Jack's Cigar, Pipe and Tobacco Shop], 71 Church St., Laconia, NH 03246<br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Threeton_02.jpg&diff=9158File:Threeton 02.jpg2008-10-08T16:53:18Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Threeton_03.jpg&diff=9157File:Threeton 03.jpg2008-10-08T16:52:53Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Threeton_05.jpg&diff=9156File:Threeton 05.jpg2008-10-08T16:52:01Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Threeton_06.jpg&diff=9155File:Threeton 06.jpg2008-10-08T16:51:23Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Italian_Pipe_Brands_%26_Makers_D_-_F&diff=9154Italian Pipe Brands & Makers D - F2008-10-08T16:48:51Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>{|<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">D</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''DAC'''||Duranti & Anselmi Castelfidardo. See ''' [[Non canta la raganella]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Daniela'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Dante Pipes]]'''||Massimo Angelo<br />
|-<br />
|'''Danya'''||Offered in USA - ''"imported Briar and is a very unique roughly carved"''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Darnell'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''DDD'''||'''[[Pipe Croci]]''' for DDD Pipe Company (USA).<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[De Candia]]'''||De Candia<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[De Canori]]'''||De Canori<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[De Giglio]]'''||Rocco De Giglio<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Del Grano]]'''||Alberto Del Grano; Parma (Parma).<br />
|-<br />
|'''del Vecchio'''||'''[[Guido del Vecchio]]'''; Santa Mauro<br />
|-<br />
|'''del Vecchio'''||'''[[Vittorio del Vecchio]]''' - pipemaker of '''[[Mastro de Paja]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[DG Pipe]]'''||Gabriele Dal Fiume; Monteveglio (Bologna)<br />
|-<br />
|'''Di Mento'''||Francesco Di Mento (broken pipe). See '''[[Vascello]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Di Monte]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Diapede'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Dino da Campione]]'''||Leonardo Airaghi (broken pipe); Milano.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Dobi's'''||Cremonisi ???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Dom Bergamo'''||???; Standard shapes<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Don Carlos]]'''||Bruto Sordini; Cagli (Pesaro e Urbino).<br />
|-<br />
|'''Don Roberto'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Dr. Forson'''||[[Savinelli]] (?). Vest pocket pipe; almost identic with Roley pipes<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Dr. Hardy]]'''||'''[[Tagliabue]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Duca Carlo'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Duca di Milano'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Duca di Paolo'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">E</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''Edison'''||'''[[Lorenzo]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Elite'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Enricoro]]'''||Enrico Marola; Vercelli (Vercelli)<br />
|-<br />
|'''Estella'''||'''[[Savinelli]]'''. Rejected "Autograph" pipes, discontinued?<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">F</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fabio'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fabris'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''FCB'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fe-Ro]]'''||Figli di Federico Rovera s.n.c.; Oltrona al Lago (Varese)<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Ferretti]]'''||Ferretti<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fiamma di Re'''||'''[[Mastro de Paja]]''' for Giannino Spadoni; ca. 1982/83 - 1989<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fiammatta'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fiare']]'''||Michele Fiare'<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Filì Pipe]]'''||Filippo Panepinto; San Giovanni Gemini (Agrigento).<br />
|-<br />
|'''[http://www.pipephil.eu/logos/logo-f.html#fincato Fincato]'''||Fincato is most probably a private label pipe of a Rome tobacconist.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[http://www.pipephil.eu/logos/logo-f.html#firex Firex]'''||A brand made for and distributed by '''[[Paronelli]]'''. The pipes were made in Italy and in the UK.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fornarino]]'''||Pipe Fornarino<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Foundation]]'''||Giorgio & Massimo Musicò; Roma.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fra-Ben-Ver'''||Also [http://www.pipephil.eu/logos/logo-f.html#fabrenver "Frabenver"] = '''Fratelli Benzon Verona''', a obsolete brand. See also [http://www.pipephil.eu/logos/logo-b2.html#benzon Benzon]!<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fratelli Pipe'''||Luigi Crugnola sub-brand / second. See '''[[Gigi]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Freddi]]'''||Bruno Freddi<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fumo'''||Giancarlo Guidi. '''[[Ser Jacopo]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Funambolo]]'''||Federico Giorio; La Spezia (SP)<br />
|-<br />
|'''FRB'''||Fratelli Rossi Barasso. See '''[[Rossi]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Back to''' [[Italian Pipe Brands & Makers A - C]] '''or continue to''' [[Italian Pipe Brands & Makers G - J]] '''!'''</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Fornarino&diff=9153Fornarino2008-10-08T16:05:14Z<p>TseHa: New page: <font size="4">'''[http://www.pipefornarino.it/ Fornarino]'''</font> Fornarino pipes are made of briar from Calabria and Tuscany. For the production the blocks are assorted carefully to ...</p>
<hr />
<div><font size="4">'''[http://www.pipefornarino.it/ Fornarino]'''</font><br />
<br />
<br />
Fornarino pipes are made of briar from Calabria and Tuscany. For the production the blocks are assorted carefully to grades from medium, medium high, high and super quality. Stems are either made of lucite or and ebonite. A lot of pipes is fitted with rings in silver, lucite, steel and other suiting materials to embellish them.<br />
<br />
The pipes are made in three qualities (rusticated, sandblasted and smooth) and in six groups of finishes (F0 - F5). For details please look up the website. They get stamped with the name, the logo and the group of finish on the shank and bear the logo on the stem. The best pieces bear an inlaid round "Master" logo in silver. (See [http://www.pipephil.eu/logos/logo-f.html#fornarino Fornarino @ Pipephil].)<br />
<center><gallery><br />
Image:Fornarino_01.jpg|<br />
Image:Fornarino_02.jpg|<br />
Image:Fornarino_03.jpg|<br />
Image:Fornarino_04.jpg|<br />
Image:Fornarino_05.jpg|<br />
Image:Fornarino_06.jpg|<br />
Image:Fornarino_07.jpg|<br />
Image:Fornarino_08.jpg|<br />
</gallery></center><br />
As the makers assure, Fornarino pipes are of special interest due to the very restrained prices. The pipes are offered at prices far below their commercial value. A F0 starts at ca. €30.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Contact information:'''<br />
: Pipe Fornarino<br />
: E-mail: [mailto:info@pipefornarino.it info@pipefornarino.it]<br />
: Website: [http://www.pipefornarino.it/ Pipe Fornarino] [http://www.pipefornarino.it/ Fornarino]<br />
<br />
[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: Italy]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_08.jpg&diff=9152File:Fornarino 08.jpg2008-10-08T15:19:04Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_05.jpg&diff=9151File:Fornarino 05.jpg2008-10-08T15:17:44Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_02.jpg&diff=9150File:Fornarino 02.jpg2008-10-08T15:16:19Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_01.jpg&diff=9149File:Fornarino 01.jpg2008-10-08T15:14:49Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_03.jpg&diff=9148File:Fornarino 03.jpg2008-10-08T15:13:22Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_04.jpg&diff=9147File:Fornarino 04.jpg2008-10-08T15:12:11Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_06.jpg&diff=9146File:Fornarino 06.jpg2008-10-08T15:10:57Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Fornarino_07.jpg&diff=9145File:Fornarino 07.jpg2008-10-08T15:09:38Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Italian_Pipe_Brands_%26_Makers_D_-_F&diff=9144Italian Pipe Brands & Makers D - F2008-10-08T14:51:39Z<p>TseHa: </p>
<hr />
<div>{|<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">D</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''DAC'''||Duranti & Anselmi Castelfidardo. See ''' [[Non canta la raganella]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Daniela'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Dante Pipes]]'''||Massimo Angelo<br />
|-<br />
|'''Danya'''||Offered in USA - ''"imported Briar and is a very unique roughly carved"''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Darnell'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''DDD'''||'''[[Pipe Croci]]''' for DDD Pipe Company (USA).<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[De Candia]]'''||De Candia<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[De Canori]]'''||De Canori<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[De Giglio]]'''||Rocco De Giglio<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Del Grano]]'''||Alberto Del Grano; Parma (Parma).<br />
|-<br />
|'''del Vecchio'''||'''[[Guido del Vecchio]]'''; Santa Mauro<br />
|-<br />
|'''del Vecchio'''||'''[[Vittorio del Vecchio]]''' - pipemaker of '''[[Mastro de Paja]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[DG Pipe]]'''||Gabriele Dal Fiume; Monteveglio (Bologna)<br />
|-<br />
|'''Di Mento'''||Francesco Di Mento (broken pipe). See '''[[Vascello]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Di Monte]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Diapede'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Dino da Campione]]'''||Leonardo Airaghi (broken pipe); Milano.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Dobi's'''||Cremonisi ???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Dom Bergamo'''||???; Standard shapes<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Don Carlos]]'''||Bruto Sordini; Cagli (Pesaro e Urbino).<br />
|-<br />
|'''Don Roberto'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Dr. Forson'''||[[Savinelli]] (?). Vest pocket pipe; almost identic with Roley pipes<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Dr. Hardy]]'''||'''[[Tagliabue]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Duca Carlo'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Duca di Milano'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Duca di Paolo'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">E</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''Edison'''||'''[[Lorenzo]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Elite'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Enricoro]]'''||Enrico Marola; Vercelli (Vercelli)<br />
|-<br />
|'''Estella'''||'''[[Savinelli]]'''. Rejected "Autograph" pipes, discontinued?<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">F</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fabio'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fabris'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''FCB'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fe-Ro]]'''||Figli di Federico Rovera s.n.c.; Oltrona al Lago (Varese)<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Ferretti]]'''||Ferretti<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fiamma di Re'''||'''[[Mastro de Paja]]''' for Giannino Spadoni; ca. 1982/83 - 1989<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fiammatta'''||'''[[Savinelli]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fiare']]'''||Michele Fiare'<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Filì Pipe]]'''||Filippo Panepinto; San Giovanni Gemini (Agrigento).<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fornarino]]'''||Pipe Fornarino<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Foundation]]'''||Giorgio & Massimo Musicò; Roma.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Fra-Ben-Ver]]'''||Also "Frabenver". Fratelli Benzon Verona<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fratelli Pipe'''||Luigi Crugnola sub-brand / second. See '''[[Gigi]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Freddi]]'''||Bruno Freddi<br />
|-<br />
|'''Fumo'''||Giancarlo Guidi. '''[[Ser Jacopo]]''' sub-brand / second.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Funambolo]]'''||Federico Giorio; La Spezia (SP)<br />
|-<br />
|'''FRB'''||Fratelli Rossi Barasso. See '''[[Rossi]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Back to''' [[Italian Pipe Brands & Makers A - C]] '''or continue to''' [[Italian Pipe Brands & Makers G - J]] '''!'''</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Pipe_Accessories&diff=9141Pipe Accessories2008-10-07T22:51:23Z<p>TseHa: /* Curiosities */</p>
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<div>== Ashtrays ==<br />
[[Image:Castello Ash.jpg|right|thumb|[[Castello]]]]<br />
A nice to have but not really a need to have, great for indoor smoking so you don't bosh your spent tobacco onto your brand new sofa but not entirely required as anything will do the trick.<br />
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== Bag and Pouch ==<br />
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* '''[http://www.schwoebs-pfeifentaschen.de.tl/ Schwoebs-Pfeifentaschen]'''<br />
* '''[http://www.smokinholsters.com/ Smokin' Holsters]'''<br />
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... and so to work!<br />
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<span style="color: red"><font size="1">Please note: this briefcase was a birthday gift years ago. Regrettably a buying source is not known!</font></span><br />
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== Cleaning Supplies ==<br />
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a tamper <br />
or a nail tool <br />
both will come in handy<br />
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== Lighters ==<br />
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jet lighters are good but matches are a great way to light a loosely packed bowl<br />
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== Pipe Rack ==<br />
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== Pipe Rests and Stands ==<br />
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== Tampers ==<br />
* [http://www.hammerpilot.com/en-us/dept_1.html Hammerpilot] - different materials<br />
* [http://www.jagwal.com/ Jagwal] - exotic and unusual woods<br />
* [http://www.ming-kahuna.com/ Ming-Kahuna] - different acrylics / others<br />
* [http://www.ozarkmountainbriars.com/tampers.htm Ozark Mountain Briars] - domestic and exotic woods<br />
* [http://www.papaduke.net/ Papa Duke] - ivory, bone & deer antler<br />
* [http://www.penguinbriar.com/ Penguin Briar] - briar tipped deer antler <br />
* [http://www.angelfire.com/ma/Sandpiper/ Sandpiper] - exotic hardwoods w. silver bases<br />
* [http://www.ramshornstudio.com/pipe_tampers.htm The Ram's Horn] - pewter casted tampers<br />
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== Curiosities ==<br />
<gallery><br />
Image:BriarPipeDryer.jpg|(1) Briar Pipe Dryer<br />
Image:Krug1.jpg|(2) Beer mug<br />
Image:Krug3.jpg<br />
Image:Krug2.jpg<br />
Image:Avon.jpg|(3) Flacon<br />
Image:Pin.jpg|(4) Pin<br />
</gallery><br />
# Electric Briar Pipe Dryer by Blue Mountain Pottery, USA.<br />
# German beer mug "Pfeifenclub Michelau" (Upper Franconia). In former centuries smoking in private houses was widely forbidden by fire police regulations. This was the origin of many a pipe or smoker's club. More recently many good housewife forbade her husband to smoke at home for the sake of the curtains. Humorously indicated on the mug by a bird escaping from it's cage.<br />
# Avon after-shave lotion, Germany ca. 1980.<br />
# Pin "Danish fancy"; origin unknown.</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Threeton&diff=9140Threeton2008-10-07T22:47:57Z<p>TseHa: New page: <font size="4">'''Robert Threeton'''</font> <span style="color: red"><font size="4">Under construction!</font></span> <center><gallery> Image:Threeton_01.jpg| Image:Threeton_04.jpg| </...</p>
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<div><font size="4">'''Robert Threeton'''</font><br />
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<span style="color: red"><font size="4">Under construction!</font></span><br />
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'''Contact information:'''<br />
: Robert Threeton<br />
: ?, New Hampshire<br />
: USA<br />
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: Tel.: <br />
: Fax: <br />
: E-mail: [mailto: ?]<br />
: Website: [ ? ]<br />
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[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Threeton_04.jpg&diff=9139File:Threeton 04.jpg2008-10-07T22:38:34Z<p>TseHa: </p>
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<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Threeton_01.jpg&diff=9138File:Threeton 01.jpg2008-10-07T22:37:53Z<p>TseHa: </p>
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<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Pin.jpg&diff=9137File:Pin.jpg2008-10-07T22:37:10Z<p>TseHa: </p>
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<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=American_Pipe_Brands_%26_Makers_T_-_V&diff=9136American Pipe Brands & Makers T - V2008-10-07T21:53:14Z<p>TseHa: </p>
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<div>{|<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">T</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Talbert Pipes]]'''||Trever Talbert (now France); <br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tapia]]'''||William Tapia; Monrovia, CA<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tatum's Workshop]]'''||Paul Tatum; Mocksville, NC<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[TC Fuller Pipes]]'''||Tim C. Fuller; ?, ID. <br />
|-<br />
|'''The Briar Workshop'''||Jorg '''[[Jemelka]]''' and Elliott '''[[Nachwalter]]'''; VT.<br />
|-<br />
| ||[[Image:BriarWorkshop_06.jpg|50px]] | [[Image:BriarWorkshop_07.jpg|50px]] | <br />
|-<br />
|'''[[The Doodler]]'''||Created by Tracy '''[[Mincer]]'''; later '''[[National Briar Pipe Co.]]'''; Jersey City, NJ.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[The Lyon Pipe]]'''||Chas. H. Lyon († 1947); sp. Gen. Charles G. Dawes. Salt Lake City, UT<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[The Smoker]]'''||Private label brand. Mel Feldman; Albany, NY. Made by '''[[Savinelli]]'''?<br />
|-<br />
|'''Thile'''||Scott E. Thile; Murray, KY. → '''[[S.E. Thile Pipes]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Thoro-Kleen]]'''||Thoro-Kleen; New York City<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Thorpe]]'''||Timothy (Tim) W. Thorpe; Sewell, NJ<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Threeton]]'''||Robert Threeton; ?, New Hampshire<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tiner]]'''||Tiner; San Diego, CA.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Tinsky'''||'''[[Glenn Tinsky]]'''; Chicago, IL.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Tinsky'''||'''[[Mark Tinsky]]'''; Wolf Creek MT. → '''[[American Smoking Pipe Co.]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[TM Pipes]]'''||Thomas Martin; Beverly, MA<br />
|-<br />
|'''Tobak'''||Mel Baker, Tobak Ltd., Virginia Beach, VA. → '''[[Kabik]]'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tom Pipecarver & Son]]'''||Tom Arcoleo; Princeton, NJ.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tony's Pipe Towne]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[TotemStar]]'''||Gunnar Weber-Prada; Los Angeles, CA.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Trail Blazer]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Trapwell]]'''||Trapwell - Pat. No. 2.232.159... "World’s Best Briar"<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tredway]]'''||Bob Tredway; Coeur d' Alene, ID<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Trent]]'''||Philip Trent; South Bend, Indiana<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tria Pipes]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Trump]]'''||Trump Custom Handmade<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tsulagi Pipes]]'''||''American made pipes, with a Native American heritage.''<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tuerk]]'''||Victor Tuerk; New York City, later California<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tybush]]'''||"Frank Tybush hand crafts these pipes in the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York. These local creations are beautiful and lightweight."<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Tyler Lane Pipes]]'''||Tyler Lane Beard (ret. from pipemaking); Midland, TX.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">U</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''Ubben'''||Randolph Ubben; New Milford, CT. → '''[[R. Ubben Pipes]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Uhle's]]'''||Uhle's Pipe Shop; Milwaukee, WI<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Union Pipe Co.]]'''||???<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''<font size="4">V</font>'''<br />
|-<br />
|'''Vacher'''||Robert Vacher; Litchfield, CA. → '''[[Laughingmoon Pipes]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''Vajra'''||Vajra Briar Works; made by Michael V. Kabik and Glen Hedelson. → '''[[Kabik]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Van Varick]]'''||Al Van Varick<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Van Roy]]'''||Van Roy - Choice Imported Briar<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Vardry Pipes]]'''||Patrick Vardry ?; upstate South Carolina<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Very Unique Pipes]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Vickers]]'''||M.O. Vickers (ret./† ?); Knoxville, TN<br />
|-<br />
|'''Victory Pipe Craftsmen'''||'''[[Cellini]]'''; Chicago, IL<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[von Erck]]'''||Lee von Erck; Negaunee, MI<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[Vottis]]'''||Pat M. Vottis<br />
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|'''Vox Pop'''||'''[[Henry Leonard & Thomas Inc.]]''' for Penn Tobacco Co., Wilkes-Barre, PA<br />
|-<br />
|'''VT Freehand'''||Steven Norse; Dorset, VT. → '''[[Norse]]'''.<br />
|-<br />
|'''[[]]'''||<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
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'''Back to''' [[American Pipe Brands & Makers R - S]] '''or continue to''' [[American Pipe Brands & Makers W - Z]] '''!'''</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Trent&diff=9135Trent2008-10-07T21:43:41Z<p>TseHa: New page: <font size="4">'''Philip Trent'''</font> about himself and his work: "I'm 36 years old ''(ca. 42 by now)'', and live, breath and sleep pipes. I started like everyone else, with a kit, gri...</p>
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<div><font size="4">'''Philip Trent'''</font> about himself and his work:<br />
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"I'm 36 years old ''(ca. 42 by now)'', and live, breath and sleep pipes. I started like everyone else, with a kit, grinder and files. I sell pipes to make a little money to buy briar to make pipes to sell so I can go and buy more briar. My dream is to carve full time. I would love to make the centerpiece for someone's collection, but first and foremost, I want folks to say 'Yeah, that such-and-such is a high-dollar beauty, but this Trent pipe is my best smoker.<br />
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Pipe making philosophy: All my pipes are drilled to achieve the most wide-open smoke possible, because I hate to relight a pipe every time I set it down for a moment. So my pipes burn well but don't overheat and don't pass debris up the mouthpiece. Similarly, I find that a massive pipe carved from heavy wood feels like a frying pan hanging in your mouth, so however impressive it may look, you'll pass it over when the time comes to pick one off the rack. I have other principals I follow that help me determine chamber size, wall thickness, smoke hole diameter, etc. The overall aim to make a pipe that smokes like a dream.<br />
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The briar I use is very old, well-seasoned Grecian wood, heat-cured using a proprietary process. The blocks were stored outside for years prior to heat-treating, and then re-moisturized in the humid Indiana climate. I am also making pipes from oil-cured Algerian briar, using a process I developed in consultation with a food chemist, and I'm very pleased with the results, and think you will be too. But on to the pipes."<br />
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'''Contact information:'''<br />
: Philip A. Trent<br />
: South Bend, Indiana<br />
: USA<br />
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: Pipes available at [http://www.finepipes.com/Trent.htm finepipes.com]<br />
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[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=Curtz&diff=9134Curtz2008-10-07T20:17:36Z<p>TseHa: New page: <font size="3">'''Arley G. Curtz'''</font>, formerly director of the [http://www.bdac.org/ Bountiful Davis Art Center] (Bountiful, Utah) and now inretirement is a hobbyistic carver. Cited...</p>
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<div><font size="3">'''Arley G. Curtz'''</font>, formerly director of the [http://www.bdac.org/ Bountiful Davis Art Center] (Bountiful, Utah) and now inretirement is a hobbyistic carver.<br />
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Cited: ''"[...] I just wanted to take the opportunity to say that his pipes are absolutely fantastic. The engineering, smoking characteristics, and appearance leave nothing to be desired. I hesitate in posting this, because if this little secret gets out, these pipes will likely become more expensive and I'll have fewer pipes from which to choose, but I truly feel that credit should be given where credit is deserved. [...]"'''<br />
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As far as known Arley Curtz' pipes are only available at Jeannie's Pipe Shop (156 S State St, Salt Lake City, UT 84111, Phone: (801) 322-2817).<br />
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'''Contact information:'''<br />
: Arley G. Curtz<br />
: 1103 East 400th Street<br />
: Salt Lake City, UT 84102-3101<br />
: USA<br />
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: Tel.: 801 - 582 - 4122<br />
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[[Category: Pipe makers by nationality]][[Category: United States]]</div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Curtz_01.jpg&diff=9133File:Curtz 01.jpg2008-10-07T19:50:02Z<p>TseHa: </p>
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<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Curtz_03.jpg&diff=9131File:Curtz 03.jpg2008-10-07T19:49:23Z<p>TseHa: </p>
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<div></div>TseHahttps://pipedia.org/index.php?title=File:Curtz_05.jpg&diff=9129File:Curtz 05.jpg2008-10-07T19:48:45Z<p>TseHa: </p>
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<div></div>TseHa