Bad flaw cover

Sanding, rusticating, sandblasting, buffing, etc. All here.
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T3pipes
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Bad flaw cover

Post by T3pipes »

I have several pipes that have rather large flaws in them. They are not so deep as to bother the smoking, but they are too large to do anything with.

I came up with the following idea. It is a work in progress and I would like some inputs before i go any further with it.

Image


Not sure if i want to leave it as is, go deeper with the battering, or maybe sandblast it. Thoughts?
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kbadkar
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by kbadkar »

The twine looks sloppy. How about a little... leather.
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bikedoctor
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by bikedoctor »

kbadkar wrote:The twine looks sloppy. How about a little... leather.
:ROFL: :ROFL: :ROFL: :ROFL:
Kevin
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Frank
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Frank »

kbadkar wrote:The twine looks sloppy. How about a little... leather.
Leather cord or waxed string - tidier job.
Regards,
Frank.
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JHowell
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by JHowell »

Drill 'em out and glue in taxidermy eyes. THERE'S a conversation starter.

Jack
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m.c.
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by m.c. »

JHowell wrote:Drill 'em out and glue in taxidermy eyes. THERE'S a conversation starter.

Jack
And sell the pipe to Hollywood sci-fi movie makers for 1000 bucks!
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Sasquatch
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Sasquatch »

Waxed twine or leather. Yep. In fact, to do a neat job of this, which is possible and rather sharp, there is a technique called "whipping" (do NOT google "leather whipping"!) which allows a tight wrap and shows absolutely not string ends - they tuck under the wraps.
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RadDavis
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by RadDavis »

All this talk of leather and whipping is making me hot.

Rad
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Sasquatch
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Sasquatch »

Rad, I don't care what you say, running "leather whipping" through Google does NOT constitute "research".
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Sasquatch
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Sasquatch »

The other thing you need to do, T3, to make this look decent, is cut/file a slot where the twine is going to sit. If you can get it so that the twine surface is flush with the rest of the pipe, it will look a lot less like a wounded soldier (Egyptian Mummy, gardening accident, you choose the joke) and a lot more like a dressed up pipe.
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RadDavis
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by RadDavis »

Sasquatch wrote:The other thing you need to do, T3, to make this look decent, is cut/file a slot where the twine is going to sit. If you can get it so that the twine surface is flush with the rest of the pipe, it will look a lot less like a wounded soldier (Egyptian Mummy, gardening accident, you choose the joke) and a lot more like a dressed up pipe.
It doesn't matter how you do it, twine is *NOT* going to "dress up" a pipe. :lol:

Rad
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baweaverpipes
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by baweaverpipes »

RadDavis wrote:
Sasquatch wrote:The other thing you need to do, T3, to make this look decent, is cut/file a slot where the twine is going to sit. If you can get it so that the twine surface is flush with the rest of the pipe, it will look a lot less like a wounded soldier (Egyptian Mummy, gardening accident, you choose the joke) and a lot more like a dressed up pipe.
It doesn't matter how you do it, twine is *NOT* going to "dress up" a pipe. :lol:

Rad
If it's hemp, you might be able to sell to a "Head Shop" :!:
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JHowell
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by JHowell »

RadDavis wrote:
Sasquatch wrote:The other thing you need to do, T3, to make this look decent, is cut/file a slot where the twine is going to sit. If you can get it so that the twine surface is flush with the rest of the pipe, it will look a lot less like a wounded soldier (Egyptian Mummy, gardening accident, you choose the joke) and a lot more like a dressed up pipe.
It doesn't matter how you do it, twine is *NOT* going to "dress up" a pipe. :lol:

Rad
What if it were woven in a tight, complex macrame that covered the entire pipe? Eh? Eh? The OP, for the record, said nothing about "dressing up," he just wanted to cover the flaws. The twine *is* non-slip. In that spirit, how about some other ideas?

Plasti-Kote tool handle dip. Band-Aids. Thick coat of epoxy and roll it in aquarium gravel -- comes in all colors!

Damn, probably should have kept that last one for myself.

Jack
Charl
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Charl »

:? No, no, no!
Six months or so ago, a guy emailed me about my pipemaking, telling me that he also makes and would like to meet. Well, a guy making pipes in SA is quite rare, and I was really, really interested. That was, until he came around one Saturday, and showed me a pipe with a leather thong around the stem/shank joint! :lol:
Well, at least I learned my lesson! :banghead:
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Nick
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Nick »

I saw a guy fill a flaw with silver once. Looked pretty darn cool.
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Sasquatch
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Sasquatch »

Rad, your jealousy is obvious, and unbecoming.

Try to be more like Jack - that aquarium gravel idea is a license to print money. Maybe we should be talking to Stanwell about a new series????
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ToddJohnson
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by ToddJohnson »

Jody's wife Laurie made him a lovely pipe. It is covered in yellow and purple "floam." One hell of an insulator and lovely too. As far as I know, the $4 pipe underneath is flawless . . . and SEXY!

TJ
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kbadkar
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by kbadkar »

I actually think my flaws are sexy, like Marilyn's mole. I don't understand the obsession with hiding them.

On one of my favorite pipes, I went so far as to exploit a gnarly gash.
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Nick
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by Nick »

FLOAM! Why didn't I think of that?
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T3pipes
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Re: Bad flaw cover

Post by T3pipes »

Here is the finished pipe.

Thanks for all the ideas. Will try some of them on other pipes that I don't want to have the overly-distressed look.

Image

Image
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