New Pipe
- Tyler
- Site Supporter
- Posts: 2376
- Joined: Thu Nov 23, 2006 8:00 pm
- Location: Farmersville, TX
- Contact:
To post the pic:
Go to the photo and right click
Select "properties"
Copy the image's URL (In the case of your first photo: http://www.pipemakersforum.com/albums/2 ... C03504.jpg)
Paste the image URL between the image tags ()
Here it is with an * added to cause an error that doesn't actually post the photo:
With the * removed:
Go to the photo and right click
Select "properties"
Copy the image's URL (In the case of your first photo: http://www.pipemakersforum.com/albums/2 ... C03504.jpg)
Paste the image URL between the image tags ()
Here it is with an * added to cause an error that doesn't actually post the photo:
With the * removed:
Tyler Lane Pipes
http://www.tylerlanepipes.com
http://www.tylerlanepipes.com
- Tyler
- Site Supporter
- Posts: 2376
- Joined: Thu Nov 23, 2006 8:00 pm
- Location: Farmersville, TX
- Contact:
Michael,
It looks like you did it right, but you were right-clicking on the image one page too early. It appears that you posted the thumbnails. If you click on each thumbnail and then right click on the large image, the posts in this message will be the large image.
Tyler
It looks like you did it right, but you were right-clicking on the image one page too early. It appears that you posted the thumbnails. If you click on each thumbnail and then right click on the large image, the posts in this message will be the large image.
Tyler
Tyler Lane Pipes
http://www.tylerlanepipes.com
http://www.tylerlanepipes.com
Thank you Nick. The round shank was deliberate, since a "Harpoon" has a round shaft. I really was careful about the fit on the stem, since my Pimo tenon tool is so tricky. It takes me a long time to make that thing work perfectly!Nick wrote:Cool shape. The round shank seems at odds with the geometric bowl. The fit looks great on the stem. Bowl shank transition is pretty deliberate, but thats what you were going for I'm sure. Very interesting.
The bowl/shank transition had to be pretty defined, since, again, it's a "harpoon". I didn't know any other way to make it work.
Thanks for the feedback, it's my best pipe so far. Not bad for a Tim West 2nd block of briar. I really am getting a lot out of his castoffs! This one is also my 15th pipe. Hopefully I will be posting some more soon.
--Michael
-
- Posts: 317
- Joined: Thu Nov 23, 2006 8:00 pm
- Location: Bochum, Germany
- Contact:
Michael, playing style police again, sigh. But we agreed on open criticism somwhat ago.
I feel that the stylization of the harpoon figure somewhat went too far in reducing the visual elements of a harpoon. I must admit I barely catch that visual idea from the pics and so I have the feeling that the shape seems somewhat "wanted", but didn't get there.
That is for the two hooks on it's back. They seem to quote the shape of a harpoon, but don't give the impression yet. Too small, I believe. I would want to see a sharp front following the idea of a harpoon, too. Which makes it necessary to have a rather huge block to start from.
And I don't get behind the bow in the back of the bowl. Maybe I have some wrong pictures of a harpoon in my mind. Maybe I am picky. But it seems a bit overstylized, so that the viewer's eye does not have a clear point to hook on to a basic visual idea. And technically: Does that bow lead to a considerable small wall thickness in his deepest point?
I have some similar thing on the bench (having a visual idea from the start, but sadly it simply does not reach that idea by far and looks ugly, probably the start idea was wrong).
I find your shape interesting to a point thinking about picking up the idea behing it for a future shape of mine.
So I still mean my criticism as sort of encouragement, don't get me wrong!
I feel that the stylization of the harpoon figure somewhat went too far in reducing the visual elements of a harpoon. I must admit I barely catch that visual idea from the pics and so I have the feeling that the shape seems somewhat "wanted", but didn't get there.
That is for the two hooks on it's back. They seem to quote the shape of a harpoon, but don't give the impression yet. Too small, I believe. I would want to see a sharp front following the idea of a harpoon, too. Which makes it necessary to have a rather huge block to start from.
And I don't get behind the bow in the back of the bowl. Maybe I have some wrong pictures of a harpoon in my mind. Maybe I am picky. But it seems a bit overstylized, so that the viewer's eye does not have a clear point to hook on to a basic visual idea. And technically: Does that bow lead to a considerable small wall thickness in his deepest point?
I have some similar thing on the bench (having a visual idea from the start, but sadly it simply does not reach that idea by far and looks ugly, probably the start idea was wrong).
I find your shape interesting to a point thinking about picking up the idea behing it for a future shape of mine.
So I still mean my criticism as sort of encouragement, don't get me wrong!
Alexander Frese
www.quarum.de
www.quarum.de