H.Johnson
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,562
- Location
- Midlands, UK
I'm not sure if this belongs in The Connoisseur thread... I wonder if anyone has experience of smoking WW2 tobacco?
A few weeks ago I bought a 1942 dated RAF OR tunic. Apart from reeking of mothballs and being very dusty it is in very good condition and has obviously been in storage for many years.
One thing that fascinates me with old clothes is what you find in the pockets and, in this case, the left chest pocket held a small quantity of old pipe tobacco. Clearly, a previous owner was a pipe smoker and had kept his pouch or pipe in that pocket and the 'spillage' seems to have built up. I thnk there is at least a probability that it dated back to WW2.
I haven't smoked a pipe since 1974, but I have a re-enactor friend who does, and passed the dried flakes over to him. Jeff humidified the residue for a while (something involving fruit) and found it amounted to almost half a pipe full (a WW2 pipe has a small bowl). Now, as it happens, one of my more exciting hobbies is collecting vintage match books and I was more than willing to contribute a few genuine WW2 matches to the cause.
We gathered around Jeff as he 'lit up'... It smelled awful, but Jeff pronounced it to be 'not bad' but received few volunteers to join him. I wonder if anyone else has experience of WW2 or similar vintage smoking materials?
A few weeks ago I bought a 1942 dated RAF OR tunic. Apart from reeking of mothballs and being very dusty it is in very good condition and has obviously been in storage for many years.
One thing that fascinates me with old clothes is what you find in the pockets and, in this case, the left chest pocket held a small quantity of old pipe tobacco. Clearly, a previous owner was a pipe smoker and had kept his pouch or pipe in that pocket and the 'spillage' seems to have built up. I thnk there is at least a probability that it dated back to WW2.
I haven't smoked a pipe since 1974, but I have a re-enactor friend who does, and passed the dried flakes over to him. Jeff humidified the residue for a while (something involving fruit) and found it amounted to almost half a pipe full (a WW2 pipe has a small bowl). Now, as it happens, one of my more exciting hobbies is collecting vintage match books and I was more than willing to contribute a few genuine WW2 matches to the cause.
We gathered around Jeff as he 'lit up'... It smelled awful, but Jeff pronounced it to be 'not bad' but received few volunteers to join him. I wonder if anyone else has experience of WW2 or similar vintage smoking materials?