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#1 |
Mr. Charisma
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What is the "purpose" of very long pipes like these:
http://www.davidspiwak.com/Antique%20Pipes.html I saw some paintings of pipes like these on a recent trip to Europe/Russia and wondered why these style pipes are not used anymore (seemingly). Thank you for your help. ![]() |
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#2 | |
I barely grok the obvious
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The purpose of the longest, skinniest one is to smoke opium. Not my area of expertise but I've seen them around over the years. The (now novelty) porcelain/tree-branch pipes were probably the bees knees until some bright boy figured out that briar made for a cool, long-lasting pipe chamber. Briar is recent on the scene - late 19th century; tabak started arriving in europe, I would guess, in the mid-1600s. Clay, metal and porcelain worked until something better came along. This is strictly a guess; it'll hold water until something better comes along from a better guesser OR an actual pipe scientist. ![]()
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"I hope you had the time of your life." |
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#3 | |
Mr. Charisma
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Could you explain the long pipe vs. short, why have these long tobacco pipes gone "out of fashion"? Or have they not? I've heard that longer pipes cool the smoke more, is this their purpose? Or is there another advantage? |
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