From pipecrafter at pipecrafter.com Sun Aug 10 14:44:55 2008 From: pipecrafter at pipecrafter.com (Kurt Huhn) Date: Sun, 10 Aug 2008 14:44:55 -0400 Subject: [Pipe-announce] 20080810 - several new offerings Message-ID: <489F3727.9060207@pipecrafter.com> There hasn't been a new update in quite a while, so this one is a big one with lots of new stuff. First is a really nice rhodesian in the countryman line. The entire story about this pipe can be read here: http://pipecrafter.blogspot.com/2008/08/changes-to-countryman-line.html You should start seeing many more updates, with a heavy emphasis on the countryman line, in a few short weeks. Here's the pipe: http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipes/countryman/rhodesian12.php Next is a dublin-ish pot that I decided to call... dublin pot. Hooray for active imaginations! At just a hair over one ounce, this is a lightweight pipe, but still a real joy to look at: http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipes/cityman/dublin_pot1.php Here's a really nice sandblast egg that I'm personally very fond of. This is the kind of pipe that I buy when I've got some extra cash laying around (which isn't often): http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipes/cityman/egg5.php Next are the inaugural pipes in a new year-round offering of interpretations of seasonal beers. I decided to combine two aspects of my life that I enjoy and actively persue, and create a series of regular special edition pipes based on beers associated with a particular time of year. One of my great passions is good beer, including brewing and historical research, so the pairing of pipes and beer was inevitable. These next two are the summer pipes, the Summer Ale and the Pale Ale. The Summer Ale is an interpretation of beers in that genre. While there's no official style called "summer ale", they are largely recognized as having a light color and flavor, with low maltiness and hop flavor and aroma, but spiced with peppery notes from spices, and possibly citrus notes either from seasoning or particular varieties of hops. This pipe is my attempt at capturing those flavors: http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipes/seasonal/summer_ale.php The Pale Ale is another of my favorite beers, and unlike it's friend above, does have a specific style guide associated with it. The malty flavors of the barley, along with an underlying sweetness, are more present than in the summer ale, but are balanced by increased hop bitterness. For me, pale ales are the embodiment of adventure. Sometimes that first step out from the impersonal mass produced cans and bottles of the mega-brewers, and into the land of the lovingly created craft brewed ales and lagers of small regional brewers, takes a bit of an adventurous spirit. After all, how many folks would belly up to a bar and ask for a Burning River? Enough about beer, here's the pipe: http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipes/seasonal/pale_ale.php The last thing I want to show off is a pipe that ended up not being for sale. This one was well on it's way to being one hell of a pipe, but the discovery of a flaw in the tobacco chamber ruled that out. I made a decision to finish it anyway and keep it for myself. As any pipe maker knows, that flaw could well amount to nothing, and the pipe might outlast me and end up getting passed on to a son-in-law or something, but it just can't be sold. I actually wrote up a couple blog entries on the subject here: http://pipecrafter.blogspot.com/2008/08/epic-fail.html http://pipecrafter.blogspot.com/2008/08/risen-from-failure.html Here's the pics: http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipeimages/phoenix1.jpg http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipeimages/phoenix1-alt1.jpg http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipeimages/phoenix1-alt2.jpg http://www.pipecrafter.com/pipeimages/phoenix1-alt3.jpg Thanks for reading, and enjoy the rest of your Sunday! -- Kurt Huhn pipecrafter at pipecrafter.com http://www.pipecrafter.com Visit my pipe making blog: http://pipecrafter.blogspot.com/