Blog by Dave Gossett
This pipe was part of an estate lot I received a few weeks ago. Borderline firewood. I was just going to throw it in the pipe parts box but decided to make it my nightshift project at work. It passes the time and keeps me awake.
I have American and English made Whitehall’s but this one is stamped Italy, so It would make a nice addition to the Whitehall collection if it came out looking presentable.
I initially planned to use this pipe for practice and try my hand at beveling a rim, so I didn’t take very many pictures of the rebuild.
It had several fills and deep gashes in the briar, and the button on the stem was completely MIA.
I started off with some aggressive sanding of the briar with 200 grit. This pipe lost some serious weight. It couldn’t get any worse so I went for broke and sanded down past the fills and gashes working around the stampings until I had a smooth stummel.
Next I gave my first rim beveling a shot. Using a rolled piece of 200 grit angled at 45 degrees, I turned the bowl slowly with one hand while sanding with the other. After trying this, I now have a new found respect for carvers that shape pipes by hand. I stopped frequently and eyeballed the rim closely to make sure it was symmetrical.
After I was content with the shape I worked my way up the grit ladder until it was smooth as babies butt.
The briar was starting to look pretty good. If I couldn’t save the original stem I would have found a substitute. The Thermofilter was similar in size and shape as my old 1919 old Loewe & Co. pipe with an antique rounded button that was popular at the turn of the century, so I modeled the stem rebuild after the Loewe.
This is the biggest stem rebuild I’ve tried so far. This recipe is great for fixing tooth holes or small missing portions. Only time will tell if an addition this large will hold up. Here is the link of how I rebuild stems if anyone wants the details.
http://pipesmagazine.com/forums/topic/how-to-fix-tooth-holes-in-stems
I piled on the mix and filed it about five times before I found the shape I was going for.
American Whitehall
English Whitehall
Italian Whitehall
It would be interesting to know how many other countries accompanied the Whitehall name.





Dave, you did a fantastic job on both the briar, and the stem. The stem looks like a NOS stem from the turn of the century, and you absolutely worked magic making many (major) blemishes disappear. BRAVO!
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Nice pipes Dave , they all turned out excellent . If MC sold these pipes to Whitehall them im sure there is a French version out there as well .
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Nice work, Dave! Love that new button!
As I understand it, Mastercraft imported the Thermofilter pipes from Italy where they were originally made by Fratelli Rossi. MC then sold them to Whitehall. If Whitehall did a lot of these sorts of deals with MC, then there’s no telling what COM you might end up with next!
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