Daily Archives: June 15, 2023

Putting together and restoring a German Porcelain Wine Pipe


Blog by Steve Laug

The fellow I restored the Napoleon figural briar for also had some parts of a Porcelain wine pipe. The base was badly chipped, the bowl was missing the brass cap and the bowl showed damage on the long neck that sat in the base. The bowl itself also had a long crack running down the front of the bowl and held together by the brass rim cap. There were no corks in the base and the two cherrywood shanks were too long and neither of them fit the base. The horn stems on them both were damaged and chipped. After going over it with him we decided to see what I could do with parts that I had available here and not use the damaged bowl and base. I also felt that the cherrywood parts would also be better used with something else. Now the hunt through my parts began in earnest. Here is a photo of the parts that he brought me carefully wrapped in tissue paper.I went through my box of parts and went through probably at least a dozen options. All were in various states of disrepair. All would need to be cleaned up. However, I found one that to me was a very likely candidate. All the parts were present on this interesting and dirty wine pipe. The pipe was kept together in a small plastic bag so I knew that all parts came to us together. It had an unchipped base, an uncracked bowl, a complete brass windcap and the a cherry wood shank and horn stem that were all in good condition. The shank end had a new cork that would need some work to fit it to the base correctly but it worked. The base had a new cork in place to hold the bowl. The painting and glaze on the bowl was in great condition other than being dirty. The amazing thing to me was that the pipe was unsmoked! I sent photos of the this pipe after I assembled it and another that I put together from parts to the fellow and he chose the one below. It has a painting of the fox on the front of the bowl.  It will clean up very well and the new trustee will get to give it an inaugural smoke! I have looked for background information on these porcelain glazed Tyrolean or Wine pipes in the past and not found much information about them. I did have an interesting graphic on my iPad that I have included below. I have no idea where I picked it up as it has been here for a long time. The pipe I am working on is virtually identical to the pipe on the far right in the photo below. Even the tassels look the same. It has a deer under the glaze on the bowl front while this one has a fox. Otherwise it is the same.I turned next to cleaning up the porcelain. I used a mild dish soap and a damp cotton pad to remove the grime and detritus from sitting in a drawer for so many years. It came off with a bit of scrubbing. I don’t like to use anything harsh on the glaze so a mild dish soap is perfect. I started with the base and then worked on the bowl. With the bowl and base cleaned and ready to go I turned to the rim top and cap. I polished the silver and brass metal on the rim top and dome wind cap with a jewelers cloth and it remove the tarnish and gave the cap a shine. It will protect it from further tarnishing. I set the base and the bowl aside and turned my attention to the shank fit. I reshaped the cork on the end of the shank so that the fit would be more solid. I used a wood rasp and very carefully reshaped the cork. I checked it often to assure that I was improving the fit not wrecking it ;). Once I was finished I used some Vaseline to enliven the cork and soften it. I have found that works to give more elasticity to the cork and makes it hold better in the porcelain. I also used it on the cork where the bowl neck fits as well to soften it. I inserted the shank in the base and the fit is snug now and feels good. I rubbed the horn shank end and the cherrywood shank down with Before & After Restoration Balm. I worked it into the wood and horn with my finger tips. I let it sit for ten minutes then buffed it off with a soft cloth. It looks more alive now.I set the shank aside to let the Balm soak in and put the bowl and base back together again. The fit in the base is very good and the combination works well. I next fit the cherry wood shank in the base and bowl. The pipe is coming together really well. I rubbed the older style horn stem down with Before and After Restoration Balm and buffed it out after 10 minutes. It looked much better. I screwed it into the cherrywood shank once it was finished. The shank and stem look very good.I put the parts together to have a look at the finished pipe. It came out looking very good.I hand buffed the parts of the pipe and put it back together. The contrast between the white porcelain, the painted fox on the front of the bowl and the horn and cherrywood shank is quite stunning. The two tassels on the string look very good as well. I believe they are made out of horsehair. The dimensions of the pipe are length: 11 inches, height base to cap: 7 inches, diameter of the bowl: 1 ¼ inches, chamber diameter: 7/8 of an inch. It is ready to be picked up along with the Napoleon figural briar pipe. Perhaps on the weekend the fellow will stop by and pick them up. Thanks for reading the blog as I walked through my work on this unsmoked old timer.