Page 2 of 2

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 6:59 pm
by Duane
WCannoy wrote:
pipeguy wrote:Walt, What r u gluing in place???? more pics
Image

It's a paneled freehand. It's gonna get mostly blasted...
The thing that I have a hard time with about a lot of the pipes I see in this forum is…how can anyone in their right mind take a match to such beautiful pieces of art. It would be like using Van Gogh’s Starry Night…or…Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa for cigarette paper! If I had a pipe like that, or many of the others I’ve seen, I’d never smoke it and it would be on a special table surrounded in a glass bubble so I could just look at it each day!

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 7:17 pm
by WCannoy
Duane wrote:The thing that I have a hard time with about a lot of the pipes I see in this forum is…how can anyone in their right mind take a match to such beautiful pieces of art. It would be like using Van Gogh’s Starry Night…or…Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa for cigarette paper! If I had a pipe like that, or many of the others I’ve seen, I’d never smoke it and it would be on a special table surrounded in a glass bubble so I could just look at it each day!
There are a few pipes that I made back in the day which, as far as I know, were never smoked, and it kinda makes me a little sad. I kinda feel like the pipe is not truly finished or complete until it is being enjoyed. To me, smoking a pipe for the first time is like hanging that Mona Lisa or Starry Night on the wall to be seen. For the pipe to remain unsmoked is like hiding those paintings in a warehouse...

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 7:20 pm
by d.huber
WCannoy wrote:
Duane wrote:The thing that I have a hard time with about a lot of the pipes I see in this forum is…how can anyone in their right mind take a match to such beautiful pieces of art. It would be like using Van Gogh’s Starry Night…or…Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa for cigarette paper! If I had a pipe like that, or many of the others I’ve seen, I’d never smoke it and it would be on a special table surrounded in a glass bubble so I could just look at it each day!
There are a few pipes that I made back in the day which, as far as I know, were never smoked, and it kinda makes me a little sad. I kinda feel like the pipe is not truly finished or complete until it is being enjoyed. To me, smoking a pipe for the first time is like hanging that Mona Lisa or Starry Night on the wall to be seen. For the pipe to remain unsmoked is like hiding those paintings in a warehouse...
Agree 10000%. The internal engineering is part of the art.

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 10:08 pm
by Duane
Yeah...I think you are probably right....I'm just not used to "functional" art!

I'm learning a lot at this site....how to use my computer to download pictures, how to understand functional art, and how to make pipes. hahaha! :)

Duane

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2013 10:56 pm
by the rev
My slogan is "functional art for pipe lovers"


Image
:)

rev

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 2:01 am
by d.huber
the rev wrote:My slogan is "functional art for pipe lovers"


Image
:)

rev
Still waiting to see that stamped on a pipe, there Rev!

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 2:03 am
by the rev
I said Saturday brother

I really hope it is Saturday too, I need the money :)

rev

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 3:28 am
by geigerpipes
Good to see you back at making pipes Walt...We have never met but I remember enjoying photos of your work some ten years ago and always admire a maker with the balls to follow his own path

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 9:54 am
by WCannoy
geigerpipes wrote:Good to see you back at making pipes Walt...We have never met but I remember enjoying photos of your work some ten years ago and always admire a maker with the balls to follow his own path
Thanks Love! It's good to be back!
I have always been a fan of your work as well! Perhaps we will get a chance to share a bowl face to tface someday...
BTW, didn't you have a circus wagon? What happed to it?

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 4:18 pm
by WCannoy
For those of you keeping track, here's the result of my white-trash clamping rig! :lol:

Image

http://waltcannoy.com/?page_id=254

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 4:30 pm
by the rev
wow!!!

rev

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 2:30 am
by The Smoking Yeti
Man, that blast is totally strange- in a good way!

Is it a Cav? Or is that not a well on the bottom?

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 4:06 am
by geigerpipes
WCannoy wrote:
geigerpipes wrote:Good to see you back at making pipes Walt...We have never met but I remember enjoying photos of your work some ten years ago and always admire a maker with the balls to follow his own path
Thanks Love! It's good to be back!
I have always been a fan of your work as well! Perhaps we will get a chance to share a bowl face to tface someday...
BTW, didn't you have a circus wagon? What happed to it?
Perhaps we will ;) Still have the wagon but we out grew it workshopwise a long time ago once i started making pipes together with Sara and getting mashined up..right now i've been trying to rebuild it into a guest house but it is still far from complete

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 1:23 pm
by WCannoy
The Smoking Yeti wrote:Man, that blast is totally strange- in a good way!

Is it a Cav? Or is that not a well on the bottom?
Oh man, Yeti, I only wish the photos could show what the blast really looks like in person. I feel like the essence of the texture is really lost in the pics. This blast has quickly become my favorite of all pipe finishes ever!

This particular pipe is not a cav. Just a bent with normal bent engineering and the shank extended down to make a foot. :D

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 1:27 pm
by WCannoy
geigerpipes wrote:Perhaps we will ;) Still have the wagon but we out grew it workshopwise a long time ago once i started making pipes together with Sara and getting mashined up..right now i've been trying to rebuild it into a guest house but it is still far from complete
That wagon was the coolest thing I've ever seen! I would have painted it up and hired someone to pull me around in it! :lol:

Re: Clamping an unusual angle...

Posted: Wed Jan 30, 2013 6:13 pm
by WCannoy
WCannoy wrote:
Duane wrote:The thing that I have a hard time with about a lot of the pipes I see in this forum is…how can anyone in their right mind take a match to such beautiful pieces of art. It would be like using Van Gogh’s Starry Night…or…Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa for cigarette paper! If I had a pipe like that, or many of the others I’ve seen, I’d never smoke it and it would be on a special table surrounded in a glass bubble so I could just look at it each day!
There are a few pipes that I made back in the day which, as far as I know, were never smoked, and it kinda makes me a little sad. I kinda feel like the pipe is not truly finished or complete until it is being enjoyed. To me, smoking a pipe for the first time is like hanging that Mona Lisa or Starry Night on the wall to be seen. For the pipe to remain unsmoked is like hiding those paintings in a warehouse...

I just discovered that one of my old pipes has gone unfinished (in the context of this conversation)...
http://pipesmagazine.com/blog/put-that- ... ng-a-pipe/ Aout the 7th paragraph down...

I'm so sad for that pipe which has not yet realised its purpose...