What do you guys think? Pleas critique.
Cheers,
Nate Davis




No doubt, before it broke, the original shank probably continued from the shallow curve into a horizontal line straight into the stem. I grasp what you were originally trying to achieve, but due to the broken shank, you now have to rethink the bowl/shank and shank/stem junctions.Zeeborn wrote:About the bowel shank junction, I did consider removing more material and give it a more abrupt junction but I intentionally made it that shape to mimic the curve of the bottom of the bowl. I just thought that having the two curves mimicking each other would give it an interesting look.
That technique is rarely use in pipes, because it rarely looks right. All the curves should all work together in harmony and flow, but you'll find that they almost never mimic each other to that degree. Having the bowl/shank transition mimic the curve of the bowl's transition from front to bottom makes a pipe look very chunky - giving it the signature "new pipe carver" look.Zeeborn wrote: About the bowel shank junction, I did consider removing more material and give it a more abrupt junction but I intentionally made it that shape to mimic the curve of the bottom of the bowl. I just thought that having the two curves mimicking each other would give it an interesting look.
Not 100% OK, but much better. See if you get further critiques, but I still think my original critique is valid for top, bottom and sides.Zeeborn wrote:So if I understand what your saying it should look something more like this?
Frank, I think at least part of the “underbulge" you were talking about was an optical illusion from the slightly high prospective of the picture. There is a slight “underbulge” but possibly not as severe as it looked. Here is a more straight on with the bottom picture. Is that amount acceptable or should no part of the bowl extend below the stem?Frank wrote: I would suggest that you remove the "underbulge" from the bottom of the bowl so that it flows horizontally into the stem.