185 ans Chacom Pipes

The Chacom Reybert Pipe are small enough to pocket, which makes them the perfect smoking pipe for the workday or a long walk. They may be small in stature, but they are seriously big on flair. The Reybert pipes captain black tobacco come in vibrant colors like green and burgundy. These little-but-mighty smokers are perfect for the stylish man on the go.

Using the syringe, I add the alcohol to the salt, topping it up chacom tobacco pipes to the bowl brim. I usually leave this treatment in the bowl overnight.Step 2I prefer to use my old trusty friend (pocket knife) to clean the cake from the bowl. It has a more rounded tip and I find it a perfect tool to clean out most pipes without damaging the bowl.Step 3With the same alcohol I use cotton pads to remove the finish off the pipe. Alcohol also does a great job at removing tar from the bowl rim. If the tar is heavy then a light sanding works better.Step 4I don’t know what it is about sanding that brings so much satisfaction; I think it is the results you get on the pipe finish; it looks like glass.

In the spring of 2016, the old production facilities were abandoned and the newly built glass factory with showroom and smokers’ lounge in Saint-Claude was occupied. The company invites visitors to the region to get an impression of the formative pipe industry in the French Jura. The building has large dimensions in order to be able to react to fluctuating and, above all, increasing demand in the future. Have a piece of history with you by purchasing a Chacom pipe. Made by the famous French Chapuis-Comoy Company, Chacom tobacco pipes are old-school pipes made with modern-day flair.

Pipemaker Eric E. Christie has been hand making pipes for over three decades, learning his trade from one of America’s great pipemakers in the 1980’s, Richard C. Johnson. Mr. Johnson opened his own tobacco store, Johnson’s Pipe Shop, in Carlisle, Pennsylvania where he made his own line of handmade pipes, Johnson Pipes. The stems on both these pipes have large gaping hole near the button end, exposing the stem’s airway.

From the pictures below, it is amply evident that I did not achieve the exact consistency I desired, but no issues, it still worked!!! Since the beginning of my journey into the beautiful and challenging world of pipe refurnishing, I am being faced with problem relating to glue. Maybe the hot temperate climate prevalent here is causing issues or the quality of glue itself is an issue. However notwithstanding the issues of glue, I was able to prepare a mixture of CA superglue and activated charcoal and applied it to the surface.

Chacom is a brand of Cuty-Fort Entreprises (Jeantet, Vuillard, Jean Lacroix, Ropp …). I wrote Charles Lemon of Dad’s Pipes who is the go to guy for all things Brigham and asked him about the pipe. He said it was a shape he did not have and did not have on his shape chart. I thought about it overnight and sent it off to him on Monday morning. I look forward to his blog on this pipe as it is a really Danish looking Brigham.

Overall the bowl was in great condition with a small white mark on the bottom of the bowl (I think it was glue). The Jura Mountains are a mountain range that helps establish a large portion of the French and Swiss border. However, it is actually the mountain range that Chacom names these pipes after, fitting into the company’s history of paying homage to French regions, culture, or history. Paykoc Pipes provides a world-class selection of tobacco pipes and tobacco pipe accessories for the modern pipe connoisseur.

The brand of the pipe was marked on the bowl – ‘Chacom coin osseu’. For chacom tobacco pipes a beginner, who most of the time is a dummy, reading all the posts in different forums to learn a general procedure how to do the work is extremely important. In rebornpipes I found a lot of information and suggestions on how to proceed. I prepared a fresh mixture of CA glue and activated charcoal and applied it to area to be filled.