Value is purely subjective. One man's fair is another man's greedy and the other's cheap. What greed is depends entirely on your point of view.
FULL DISCLOSURE : CURMUDGEON RAP AHEAD.
Meh . . .
The curse of the XX Century : Everybody's an "authority' because "everything's relative." And the further out on the "art" limb, the more "true" that is supposed to be.
Well, no it isn't. The Soccer Mom watching her kid play entertains a much higher opinion of him than the coach probably does.
There are bars that need to be surmounted in any handcraft, and always have been. The machine age has only enforced them more universally by making accurate productions more readily available to more people at cheaper prices.
Round shanks want to be uniformly round along their lengths. Tapered or parallel, you want to be able to hold the pipe with the stem facing the light source and see a uniformly straight reflection of it as you rotate the stem. Lathes do that. Which means, if you don't have one, you've got to be able to do it by hand and eye. It's not some great accomplishment, either.
It gets stickier with oval shanks. Much stickier. And when you go to diamond shanks (bulldogs for example), on any pipe that claims to even have even a passable level of workmanship (let alone quality as "art"), the base-line standard is four dead-flat surfaces of uniform width, meeting in four dead straight lines. No dips, no wobbles, no fudging. Then there's Master-level stuff, like the way the shank meets (or doesn't) the bowl without compromising the integrity of either beyond a necessary minimum.
IOW, the same set of standards that Ben Wade, Charatan and the rest of them owed their positions to consistently meeting and transcending.
It can be stickier yet with stems (and with some bowl shapes), but you get my drift.
Meet that set of minimal standards, every time, and you can begin to figure you're at least in contention as an Artist-level craftsman. Substitute creative ways of evading it (and a lot of later XX Century commercially-successful production-shop pipe shapes were probably designed with this in mind), rusticate or sandblast pretty much everything you turn out to hide the evidence, and, except for drilling, mortising & stemming, you're one of the cast of hundreds competing with machine work without meeting machine standards.
Can you still carve out a niche doing that ? Sure. Look around. Pipes have become the new Cigars, and a rising tide lifts all boats. It's a great time to be getting your chops honed.
But I wouldn't be resting easy if I were, no matter how many . . .
Nah. That would just annoy more people than just pipemakers. Suffice it that "in the judgment of history" (if we luck out and there
is one), some of the names in the current consensus rankings will be replaced by others not currently held in universal, over-arching esteem.
(As a first-time NEW pipe customer, I'm voting with my $$. Stay tuned for that).
Ever hear of Spohr, Hummel, Cherubini, Weber or Meyerbeer ? In the 1830s, they were bigger deals than Beethoven.
Hot air balloons are no new phenomenon in the arts.
:face: