Estate Abe Herbaugh – Blasted Freehand - Unsmoked

In stock
SKU
K1004
$975.00 $780.00
5000.00
A: 49 mm - 1.93" inch
B: 58 mm - 2.28" inch
C: 153 mm - 6.02" inch
D: 16 mm - 0.63" inch
E: 35 mm - 1.38" inch
Pipe - Measurements
Weight: 24 gram - 0.85 ounces
Filter: No Filter
Brand: Abe Herbaugh
Product no: K1004

Though born in Newport News, VA, rising American pipemaker Abe Herbaugh has called West "By God!" Virginia his home for most all of his life. In an artisanal world where the word ‘young' tends to get applied to any carver under the age of 40, Mr. Herbaugh is young (28 as of this writing), and it must be said a certain youthful enthusiasm and vitality does shine within his work. His decade-long vocation as an electric guitar builder and skilled repair expert of the same, has inculcated within Abe the necessary woodworking/ machining skills and an acute eye for the smallest of details. Even his avocation, that of a long distance hiker, has imbued Abe with both an unwavering determination as well as a ‘never settle' mindset, which is already serving him admirably as a pipe artisan. 

Abe's early memories of rich pipe tobacco in the air, and the way a relative of his looked when he smoked it, kindled a desire within the youth to become a pipe smoker himself, in turn leading eventually to thoughts of trying his hand at the craft of creating them (no doubt given a boost when he purchased and beheld his first premium pipe from Rad Davis). He soon began to make his own pipes. His first pipe was carved from a random block, utilized a pre-cut stem and was (in his words) "an unmitigated disaster". For his subsequent work, he used his father's fiddle workshop. Today Abe primarily crafts his pipes from Mimmo briar ("I have tried a few others, but I always wind up coming back to Mimmo"), hand-shapes his stems from ebonite, and drills his draft holes to 5/32". While his learning of the craft has been overwhelmingly autodidactic, Premal Cheda, having picked up one of Abe's pipes as an estate, thought that Abe had talent, and invited Herbaugh over for a few days to show him some of the tricks of the trade - an encounter which Abe says helped his progress immensely. We're quite excited about Abe Herbaugh's pipes. and predict naught but blue skies for this fine young artisan. 

We just love that Abe has chosen to work with the old Ivarsson ideas, enough are copying the younger Ivarssons again and again. Here we present an old Ivarsson classic with a massive plateau added. The best feature about this pipe is the perfect deep ring grain – amazing!

Though born in Newport News, VA, rising American pipemaker Abe Herbaugh has called West "By God!" Virginia his home for most all of his life. In an artisanal world where the word ‘young' tends to get applied to any carver under the age of 40, Mr. Herbaugh is young (28 as of this writing), and it must be said a certain youthful enthusiasm and vitality does shine within his work. His decade-long vocation as an electric guitar builder and skilled repair expert of the same, has inculcated within Abe the necessary woodworking/ machining skills and an acute eye for the smallest of details. Even his avocation, that of a long distance hiker, has imbued Abe with both an unwavering determination as well as a ‘never settle' mindset, which is already serving him admirably as a pipe artisan. 

Abe's early memories of rich pipe tobacco in the air, and the way a relative of his looked when he smoked it, kindled a desire within the youth to become a pipe smoker himself, in turn leading eventually to thoughts of trying his hand at the craft of creating them (no doubt given a boost when he purchased and beheld his first premium pipe from Rad Davis). He soon began to make his own pipes. His first pipe was carved from a random block, utilized a pre-cut stem and was (in his words) "an unmitigated disaster". For his subsequent work, he used his father's fiddle workshop. Today Abe primarily crafts his pipes from Mimmo briar ("I have tried a few others, but I always wind up coming back to Mimmo"), hand-shapes his stems from ebonite, and drills his draft holes to 5/32". While his learning of the craft has been overwhelmingly autodidactic, Premal Cheda, having picked up one of Abe's pipes as an estate, thought that Abe had talent, and invited Herbaugh over for a few days to show him some of the tricks of the trade - an encounter which Abe says helped his progress immensely. We're quite excited about Abe Herbaugh's pipes. and predict naught but blue skies for this fine young artisan.