Tobacco pipe

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History and Cultural Significance

  • Indigenous peoples of the Americas have been smoking tobacco in ceremonial pipes for centuries.
  • Tobacco spread from South America to North America before reaching Europe in the 16th century.
  • Pipes were used for smoking various substances before the introduction of tobacco to the Old World.
  • Pipe smoking is considered the oldest traditional form of tobacco consumption.
  • Different cultures in the Americas use tobacco pipes for ceremonial and social purposes.

Components and Materials

  • Key parts of a pipe include the bowl, chamber, draught hole, shank, mortise, tenon, stem, bit, lip, and bore.
  • Common pipe materials include briar wood, meerschaum, corncob, clay, and various other woods and minerals.
  • Stems of tobacco pipes are usually made of Ebonite, Lucite, Bakelite, or soft plastic.
  • Bamboo, gourds, pyrolytic graphite, metal, and glass are also used for smoking various substances.
  • Expensive pipes may have stems made of rare materials like amber.

Pipe Types and Shapes

  • Pipe shapes include Apple, Billiard, Bulldog, Calabash, Canadian, Churchwarden, Dublin, Freehand, and Sitter.
  • Each pipe shape has unique characteristics and designs.
  • Popular pipe shapes include the Apple, Billiard, Bulldog, Calabash, and Churchwarden.
  • Freehand pipes offer unique designs like Blowfish, Horn, and Nautilus shapes.
  • Materials used for pipes range from traditional woods like briar to unconventional materials like pyrolytic graphite.

Pipe Varieties and Accessories

  • Hookahs are Middle Eastern water pipes that cool smoke through a water chamber.
  • Bowl materials include briar, meerschaum, gourd, porcelain, synthetics, ebony, cherry wood, beechwood, corn cob, and metal.
  • Pipe accessories include filters made of paper, balsa wood, charcoal, Meerschaum, and Denicool filter crystals.
  • Essential tools include pipe tool, matches, and pipe cleaners.
  • Tobacco blends come in U.S. and English varieties with different origins and curing processes.

Care and Maintenance

  • Proper packing techniques involve optimizing airflow for a good smoke and maintaining consistent burn.
  • Lighting methods include using matches or wood slivers over lighters and avoiding torch-style lighters.
  • Techniques to prevent burning involve coating the chamber with substances and building up a cake on the pipe walls.
  • Smoking tips include not inhaling pipe smoke, nicotine absorption through mucous membranes, and using a pipe cleaner to dry out the bowl and inner channel.
  • Cleaning practices include removing ash and dottle, running a moistened pipe cleaner through the stem and shank, and managing the thickness of the cake to prevent bowl cracking.

Tobacco pipe Data Sources

Reference URL
Glossary https:/glossary/tobacco-pipe
Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobacco_pipe
Wikidata https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q104526
Knowledge Graph https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/06q4j
DBPedia http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tobacco_pipe
Product Ontology http://www.productontology.org/id/Tobacco_pipe