Well unfortunately for my bank account I just got my first Tom Eltang a few weeks back and fell in love with it. I will be adding at least 1 more to the collection when the right pipe pops up at the right time. I have artisan pipes from Wiley, Ruthenberg, Rad Davis, Bruce Weaver, Tom Eltang. The meers are a Baki gourd Calabash and an IM Baglan hand carved Gandalf pipe. I think Wiley is still carving as of course is Tom Eltang. Ruthenberg and Rad Davis have retired (though Rad does the sanblasting on Mark Tinsky's pipes), Bruce Weaver has passed to his reward and I don't know about Baki and Baglan. Maybe I have just been lucky with my artisan pipes but they have all been outstanding smokers with fantastic engineering and they are beutiful to look at (at least to my eyes). I know there is a lot of debate about whether or not an artisan pipe is worth the extra money. If just depends. If you find the right artisan who has some proven experience and it's a pipe you want then I don't think you can lose. Of course cost comes into the picture. A bespoke pipe where you have a chance to interface with the makerhas some added intrinsic value as well since that pipe represents a relationship between you and it's creator. I can not smoke my Bruce Weaver without recalling my phone calls and emails with Bruce and remembering what a warm, wonderful man he was. It has become so much more than just a pipe. I really sort of chuckle sometimes when I see someone on a forum ridicule another brother after the purchase of an artisan or high end pipe with comments like" For the price of that pipe you could have bought..." Such folks don't really grasp the concept that there is really a different between what something cost and what it is to it's owner. I am proud to own good smoking cobs and good smoking artisan and factory pipes but there is something very special about my artisans that I would really not expect anyone but me to understand. I smoke and enjoy them all.