African Block Meerschaum
From Tanzania, Africa and is usually stained in varying shades of brown, black
and yellow.
Air Cured
Dried naturally, sheltered from sunlight. This drying is carried out on the
whole plant or as individual leaves reach maturity. There are generally five
crops in a season. Sugar produced by the plants is degraded during the three
months treatment.
Amber
brittle, feels like glass to the teeth - Usually used with meerschaum pipes.
American Blend
A Blend having the following components: Virginia, Burley and Oriental in variable
proportions to which a "sauce" consisting of humidifying and sugar
elements is added. These blends are finally sprayed with aromatic flavours.
Apple
This pipe has a round bowl and as the name suggests - like an apple.
Aromatic
Originally mainly from Europe and America, these have been enthusiastically
taken up by the younger smoker, with rich flavours like cherry, orange, chocolate,
coffee, whisky and many more additives.
B
Bent
The bent pipe is either half bent or full bent. The bowl varies in shape and
may be like another model, e.g., "bent Bulldog".
Birdseye
Also called Crossgrain, Birdseye is the grain of the wood, seen on end.
Bit
The part of the pipe stem that fits in the mouth. Also called the mouthpiece.
Bowl
The part of the pipe that holds the tobacco.
Bowl Coating
Bowl Coating is exactly that, something that a pipe maker coats thebowl with,
usually to help speed up break in.
Briar
The name is a corruption of the French word "bruyere", or heath tree,
a low shrub found throughout Europe, though mainly around the Mediterranean.
The true briar is only made out of the very hard, dry root of the mature shrub
which may be anything up to 250 years old.
Bulldog
A squat pipe. There is an indentation around the widest part of the bowl. Has
a square shank.
Burl
The burl is the dense mass of wood at the center of the root system of the Heath
tree (erica arborea). It is from the burl that pipes are carved.
Burley
Highly developed tobacco plants, the culture of which has recently expanded.
This type of tobacco does not ferment like the "Dark", but generally
"matures". Burley, though not very aromatic, is very useful in blending.
C
Calabash
A South African gourd similar to a squash grown specifically for use in pipes.
The shape is determined as the gourd grows by placing small blocks under the
stem, forcing it into a gentle curve. The mature gourd is cut and dried, then
fitted with a cork gasket to receive a meerschaum bowl. The finished pipe offers
one of the coolest, driest smokes available. Immortalized by Sherlock Holmes
and in Jimmy Durante's signature line - "Good night Mrs. Calabash - wherever
you are."
Canadian
This pipe is again similar to the Billiard but has a long shank and a short,
oval stem.
Cake
A small layer of protective carbon allowed to form and remain in the bowl of
a briar pipe. The cake protects the briar from burning but too much cake can
split the pipe by causing uneven heating of the bowl.
Carnuaba
A wax, used to give pipes their shine.
Casing
An integral part of an aromatic tobacco blend. Casing, also referred to as "sauce"
is the mixture of aromatic compounds, flavorings, and binding agents sprayed
on aromatic blends.
Cavendish
Cavendish is a method treating tobacco, not a type of tobacco. Cavendish is
mainly produced from Virginia and Burley tobaccos, and happens by steaming the
tobacco, and then storing it under pressure for several days (or weeks), to
allow it to ferment.
Cherry Wood
The wood of the Cherry Tree. At one time, a popular wood for making pipes from.
Now only a few companies produce cherry wood pipes.
Churchwarden
A pipe with an extremely long stem.
Clay
A pipe made from Clay. There are two main varieties; hand-rolled and slip-cast.
Hand-rolled are exactly that. The clay is rolled by hand into the shape of the
pipe, and awire inserted into it before firing to create a draw-hole. A Slip
cast pipe is one made with a more liquid clay poured into a mold. In general,
hand-rolled clays are held in higher regard.
Corncob
A pipe made from the interior cob of an ear of corn.
Cube
A particular cut of tobacco, in which the leaf is cut ito small roughly square
chunks. A popular cut for Burley tobacco.
Curing
Curing is the process of drying newly harvested tobacco. Curing takes many forms,
such as air curing, flue curing, fire curing, etc.
D
Delrin
Delrin is an outstanding general purpose mechanical plastic, and is popular
for its versatility in industry today. It is used by some pipe makers for tenons.
DGT (Delayed Gratification Technique)
Dottle
Unburned tobacco left in the heel of a pipe.
Dublin
A pipe having a half-elipse (parabola) bowl and any kind of shank and stem,
bent or straight.
E
English
An English blend is usually one which has as it's base a Virginia tobacco, to
which are added Oriental tobaccos, Latakia, and perhaps some Perique. In common
usage, 'english' also denotes a tobacco that is free from artificial flavoring.
Ebonite
A variety of lucite patented and used solely by Ashton of England. It is argued
that it is more durable than vulcanite and more comfortable than lucite
F
Ferrule
A ring or band arounda pipe's shank. Commonly seen materials for pipe ferrules
are acrylic, silver, horn and bone.
Fill
Places where a wood filler has been used to smooth over surface defects. Generally
regarded as lessening the pipe's value.
Finish
The techniques, stains and waxes applied to the exterior surface of a pipe.
Common finish terms are: smooth, rusticated, sandblasted, natural.
Fire Cured
Kentucky fire-cured tobacco is Stalk-Cured under controlled humidity in barns
with a series of gentle smoldering hardwood fires throughout. Considerable care
is taken to achieve proper yellowing; firing requires considerable skill so
as not to "burn" the tobacco or cause tobacco rot through too high
humidity. The resultant tobacco possesses a powerful smoky note reminiscent
of smoked meats and provides a rich "smoky & sweet note" in tobacco
products. Fire-Cured Tobacco is much less pungent than Latakia, a sun-cured
& smoke-cured tobacco produced in the mid-east with a unique fuel source.
Flake
A type of tobacco produced by being compacted under great pressure and heated
for days at a time, producing cakes of tobacco which when taken from the press
are guillotined into thin slices.
Flame Grain
Flame grain is the name applied to grain that is almost 'straight grain' but
displays some variation in the thickness of the grain, resulting in a "tiger's
eye" type of look.
Flue Cured
Flue-cured tobacco is lemon, orange, or mahogany in color, with a high sugar
content and a medium-to-high nicotine content. Flue curing requires a closed
building equipped with a system of ventilation and a source of heat. When heat
and humidity are controlled, leaf color changes, moisture is quickly removed,
and the leaf and stems dry.
Freehand
Used to refer to any pipe shape that is outside of the 'normal', meaning named,
styles of pipe making. These were popularized by Danish carvers in the first
half of the twentieth century, but now every region of pipemaking has at least
one producer of freehand shapes, and many traditional carvers occasionally create
a freehand or two.
G
Gourd
Gourd refers to a Calabash actually made fro mthat gourd, to distinguidh it
from a briar pipe carved in the general shape of a calabash. Often used as 'gourd
calabash'.
H
Heath
Erica Arborea, the heath tree is the source of briar burls, from which briar
pipes are carved. It grows best in the arid soils of the Meditteranian and Asia
Minor.
Heel
The bottom of the inside of the pipe bowl.
Humidor
A thing in which to store tobacco. Ideally - cheap and air-tight (try Tupperware)
- one places fresh tobacco in it and once sealed, it will maintain the tobacco
in a smokable consistency indefinitely. A major alternate use of a humidor is
the "re-moistening" of dried out tobacco. For this action one adds
a source of moisture to the tobacco in the humidor before sealing.
I
J
K
L
Latakia
A city in Syria, for which a particular Oriental varietial tobacco is named.
Latakia is now produced in both Syria and in Cyprus. Latakia is the result of
a curing process involving fire curing the leaves over controlled fires of aromatic
woods and fragrant herbs. Probably the most well known spice tobacco. Mainly
grown in Cyprus and northern Syria. After the leaves are harvested and dried,
they are hung in tightly closed barns and smoke-cured. Small smouldering fires
of oak and pine fill the barn with smoke, and covering the leaves with smoke
particles.
Lovat
A billiard shape pipe with a saddle bit.
Lucite
Trade name for a very hard and durable plastic. It is commonly used as a material
for pipe stems on both hand made and mass-produced pipes. Many makers favor
lucite because of its durability; however, many consider it not as comfortable
in the mouth as vulcanite. It is particularly favored over vulcanite (which
is softer) among Italian pipe craftsmen.
M
Meerschaum
"Meerschaum" is a German word meaning literally, "sea-foam,"
alluding to the belief that it was the compressed whitecaps of waves, just as
it is said in mythology for the goddess of beauty - Aphrodite. Meerschaum is
a hydrated magnesium silicate. Magnesium doesn't make it strong and the hydrogen
and oxygen don't make it cool. It is the crystalline structure; the arrangement
of the magnesium, silicon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms in a rigid crystalline
structure that makes sepiolite (the clay mineral that is identified by pipe
smokers as meerschaum) so good for smoking. The average size of the meerschaum
blocks extracted from the clay is about the size of a grapefruit.
Mixture
A mixture is a blend of different tobaccos, each chosen for their particular
characteristics, assembled by a blender to acheive a particular tobacco taste
or experience.
Mouthpiece
The mouthpiece is all of the pipe that is not, technically, the bowl. It is
made up of the lip, the draft hole, and the tenon.
N
O
Oom Paul
The Oom-Paul (Afrikaans for Uncle Paul) is a pipe shape named after Paul Kruger,
President of the ZAR (Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek) during the late 1800's. It
is defined as a bent pipe that has the end of the stem roughly in line with
the top of the bowl."
Oriental
Oriental, or Turkish, is a spice tobacco known for its nutty, somewhat "sweet
and sour" flavor. It's a main component in English blends, along with Latakia
(which is itself an Oriental that's been flavored with smoke). This tobacco
derives its name from the area in which it's grown: the Eastern Mediterranean.
Each of the varietals, in fact, are named after the towns or regions they come
from. Thus Yenidje and Smyrna are Greek, Samsun and Izmir are Turkish, Drama
is Macedonian, and Xanthe is from the region of Thrace, which is mostly in Greece.
For all intents are purposes this is all one region, united for many years under
Turkish rule (hence the interchangeable terms "Oriental" and "Turkish".)
Oriental tobacco plants characteristically have a great deal of small leaves.
The finished product ranges in color from yellow to brown, and is strongly aromatic.
Its smell is reminiscent of used horse bedding, which could possibly explain
why it's often mixed with Latakia.
P
Perique
Perique is a spice tobacco, usually used in Virginia blends. It has a dark,
oily appearance, and a taste of pepper and figs. Its flavor is very strong,
so it isn't usually found in high percentages in a blend. It can be smoked straight,
but isn't intended to be. Its role as a complement to VA's is not just because
of its flavor. Being highly acidic, it tends to alleviate alkaline tongue bite,
which is so often a problem with Virginia tobacco. The process by which this
tobacco is produced pre-dates Columbus. The Choctaw Indians of (what would later
be) Louisiana would make it by pressing it into hollow logs with a long pole,
and securing it with weights. After the Acadians (Cajuns) settled the area in
the mid-1700's, the Choctaws taught this process to a French colonist by the
name of Pierre Chenet. The finished product was referred to as Perique, a Cajun
variation on the word "prick". This referred either to the phallic
shape of the carottes (the tight bundles of market-ready Perique), or Chenet
himself, as it was his nickname!
Pipe
Narrow tube of clay, wood, etc. with bowl at one end for drawing in smoke of
tobacco. - Oxford English Dictionary
Plug
Conditioned with water, the blend is slowly pressed in large steam presses for
several days to meld the rich and varied aromas. The cakes are then divided
into plug form, allowing the smoker to cut and rub it out to their own preference.
Poker
a pipe with poker bowl, a cylindrical bowl not rounded at the bottom; usually
stem connects to bowl at abrupt angles, without any sort of contouring or smoothing.
Straight pokers with round shanks look like judge's gavels. Pokers with bent
stems may be called cherrywoods.
Pot
a pipe with a pot bowl, provided it cannot be described any other way. May be
bent or straight, and may be found with various shanks, but round or oval seem
most common.
Prince
bowl resembles squat apple or apple with flattened bottom; shank is round and
short, stem is long and almost always tapered; there may be a slight bend, but
never more than 1/8. Sometimes called "Prince of Wales," or "Prince
Regent," this shape was designed for Prince Albert (Edward VII) of England.
A prince with an oval shank (usually bent) is a diplomat.
Q
R
Rack
A storage place for your pipes. To most enjoy pipe smoking one needs several
pipes to accommodate one's moods and activities.
Reamer
A tool for smoothing out the "cake" and trimming it down to a desired
size. Reamers come in a variety of shapes and functionalities.
Ribbon
Tobacco cut into long, thin ribbons, though not as long or as fine as shag.
Rotation
A rotation is a system by which a pipe smoker keeps his/her pipes in good working
order by varying when each pipe is smoked. Most smokers own more than one pipe,
their selection of pipes can be said to be their 'rotation'. It can also be
said that the particular order in which the pipes are smoked is the 'rotation'.
However it is used, 'rotation' speaks to the need for you to allow each pipe
to rest for a period between smokes. How long your pipes need to be rested is
a hotly debated topic, but it seems that the minimum time acceptable is around
48 hours, so to build a decent rotation of pipes, you will need to purchase
(number of pipes you smoke in a day) x 2, to allow a two day rest between pipes.
Rubbed Out
A flake tobacco that has been partially broken up.
Rusticated
A finishing technique in which the outside surface is decoratively roughed up.
S
Sandblast
A finishing technique in which the softer wood in the grain is blasted away,
leaving the harder rings standing out.
Shag
Tobacco which has been shredded very finely. Renowned as the type of preference
for Sherlock Holmes; at that time, shag was considered an inferior grade.
Shank
The part of the pipe that joins the bowl and the stem
Stain
A pigment, either vegetal or mineral, applied to the outside of a pipe to acheive
a particular coloring.
Stem
The part that connects the shank with the bit.
Straight
A pipe without a bend in the shank.
Straight Grain
Grain so densely packed together that it runs in perfect straight lines, as
opposed to the wavier 'flame-grain'
Sun Cured
Sun curing is the drying of uncovered sticks or strings of leaf in the Sun.
Of all Sun-cured tobaccos, the best known are the so-called oriental tobaccos
of Turkey, Greece, Yugoslavia, and nearby countries. These are used in cigarettes
and have characteristic aromas. They are low in both sugar and nicotine.
T
Tamp
To gently pack down the burning tobacco in a lit pipe. Doing so keeps the smoldering
tobacco in contact with the unlit tobacco, keeping your pipe from going out.
Tamper
What you use to Tamp.
Tenon
The projection on the end of the mouthpiece/stem that fits into the mortise
on the bowl of the pipe.
Tongue Bite
Tongue bite is a burning sensation on the smoker'? tongue, previously thought
to be due to the heat of the smoke (i.e. a "hot smoking pipe")
Twist
The name Twist originates from sailors who made the tobacco into balls, soaking
it in molasses for a sweeter taste. The Twist tobacco was then chewed not smoked,
as the sailors worked on wooden boats and smoking would have been a fire hazard.
Chewing the tobacco was also suited to miners due to the obvious fire risks
in the mines. Twist is made from dark-fired leaf and spun to give a rope effect.
Thinner types are used for chewing, whilst the thicker brands of Twist are used
for smoking.
U
V
Virginia
Virginia is by far the most popular tobacco type used in pipe tobacco today.
About 60% of the nations tobacco crop is Virginia. Virginia is mildest of all
blending tobaccos and has the highest level of natural dextrose (sugar), which
basically gives it a light sweet taste. Virginia is used in virtually all blends,
is a good burner and aids in lighting. Pure Virginia tobacco is best known from
flake types. Dunhill's Light Flake is a very good example. Medium in strength
and rather sweet in taste. Several blends by Rattray comes into mind also. Marlin
Flake being a rather heavy member of the family, but still very sweet. The Danish
manufacturer A&C Petersen has the Blue Caledonian. Mild to medium in strength,
and a nice pure taste of Virginia tobacco.
Vulcanite
A dark-colored variety of India rubber that has been subjected to vulcanization
: also called "hard rubber." A common material used for the stem on
both mass-produced and hand-made pipes. Some pipe makers consider it preferable
to lucite because it is softer and therefore more comfortable in the mouth.
The disadvantage over lucite is that it is less durable. It is favored by some
English and Danish makers. Traditionally, the best vulcanite comes from Germany;
however, many disagree on this point.