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Sasquatch wrote:I ordinarily wouldn't believe that Micah could do such a thing, but now that I've read it, I know it's true.
What a sad world we live in.
They're like the veal of venison. Once you've had baby dik dik, there's no going back. I don't know whether to praise or curse Ryan for introducing me.
Here's my very first pipe (a photographer friend took the pictures for me, so at least the photo is nice, makes it less painful to look at this early attempt )
And this is one of my latest work:
I will not comment on some of yours progress 'cause it makes me fucking jealous. I'm off to work. Hard.
One thing I want to add, in a rare serious moment, is the sheer amount of effort and force of will I think all of us have invested to get these kind of results.
Pipe making is easy, two holes line up and it's a pipe. Making pipes that are all aesthetically pleasing, fully functional, engineered to hold up for the long run and having a high degree of fine detail is excruciatingly difficult. I wanted to give up more times than I care to admit and often felt like what I was trying to accomplish was actually impossible.
There is a reason why this traditionally was learned over the course of years in apprenticeships.
I think I speak for everyone here, but certainly the majority of us, it ain't easy !
Sasquatch wrote:I ordinarily wouldn't believe that Micah could do such a thing, but now that I've read it, I know it's true.
What a sad world we live in.
They're like the veal of venison. Once you've had baby dik dik, there's no going back. I don't know whether to praise or curse Ryan for introducing me.
Just cuss me, it will come to you more naturally !
If you go to my flickr gallery (link is in my signature) you will find all the photos of that pipe. The birdseye isn't as spectacular as it could be, a little contrast stain would have made it pop some more. But now someone will have the joy of seeing it color with time, the grain should look really nice after a couple of years of smoking and handling.
Alden wrote:One thing I want to add, in a rare serious moment, is the sheer amount of effort and force of will I think all of us have invested to get these kind of results.
Pipe making is easy, two holes line up and it's a pipe. Making pipes that are all aesthetically pleasing, fully functional, engineered to hold up for the long run and having a high degree of fine detail is excruciatingly difficult. I wanted to give up more times than I care to admit and often felt like what I was trying to accomplish was actually impossible.
There is a reason why this traditionally was learned over the course of years in apprenticeships.
I think I speak for everyone here, but certainly the majority of us, it ain't easy !