Stanwell democratised Danish artisan design — shapes by Sixten Ivarsson, Jess Chonowitsch, Tom Eltang, Anne Julie and the S. Bang workshop, each stamped with a factory shape number and the distinctive crowned-S logo. Pre-2010 Made-in-Denmark estates, Royal Danish rarities and Featherweight clenchers, listed by collectors right now.
No Stanwell listed at this moment — here's what's live across the marketplace.
Stampings photographed, era dated, condition described — estate Stanwells you can trust.
Pipes ship to Australia fully tracked and insured. Imports may attract GST above the low-value threshold; transit is longer than domestic, so each listing shows the seller's location to set expectations.
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From everyday smokers to collector pieces and authenticated estates — here's how the range breaks down.
Stanwell's premium sub-brand using the same Ivarsson-era shape vocabulary; shape numbers carry a leading 9 (Royal Danish 990 = Stanwell 90). Sandblast-and-smooth panels and a large stem crown are the signatures.
Browse Royal DanishFactory editions of shapes commissioned from Denmark's top artisans — Ivarsson, Chonowitsch (Calabash 162, Viking 172), Eltang, S. Bang and Anne Julie. Attribution is documented by shape number.
Shop Designer shapesTom Eltang's scaled-down reinterpretations of classic Stanwell forms, targeting a sub-30-gram smoking weight. The hexagonal shank and tapered vulcanite stem identify the line — ideal for clenchers.
Shop FeatherweightWarm golden-brown sandblasts drawing on the same Ivarsson shape library — designer silhouettes in a robust, grip-friendly texture at mid-tier prices.
Browse Golden Danish estatesDeep rusticated or blasted finishes on the 500-series shapes, marked 'RG' on the shank cap with an ornamental fancy stem — produced at Borup through 2009.
Browse Royal Guard estatesAnnual limited edition since 1979, each engraved with its year in the silverwork and most years carrying a named Danish designer. Collecting a run of consecutive years is a popular project.
Find Pipe of the YearStanwell contracted Denmark's greatest individual carvers — Sixten Ivarsson, Jess Chonowitsch, Tom Eltang, Anne Julie and Svend Bang — to design factory shapes. Each collaboration is preserved in the catalogued 'regd. no.' shape numbers, so an affordable estate can carry the same silhouette as a hand-made Ivarsson original.
The Borup factory closed at the end of 2009; every pipe stamped 'Made in Denmark' left that plant. From 2010 onward, Italian producer Barontini took over and pipes carry 'Danish Design' instead. That single stamp change is the sharpest dividing line in Stanwell collecting.
Since 1979, Stanwell has issued a limited annual Pipe of the Year, most years designed by a named Danish master and engraved with the year in its silverwork. The series forms a ready-made collector set spanning decades of Danish pipe-making history.
Poul Nielsen founds the company in Denmark, initially crafting beechwood pipes under the Kyringe name during the wartime briar shortage.
The firm is renamed Stanwell; Nielsen partners with Sixten Ivarsson, beginning the designer-collaboration model that defines the brand. The 'REGD. No. 969-48' trademark stamp appears from this year.
The annual Pipe of the Year programme launches; the Borup factory is by now producing hundreds of thousands of pipes a year, many carrying shapes by Denmark's leading artisans.
Danish production at Borup ends (close of 2009); Italian maker Barontini takes over, stamping pipes 'Danish Design' rather than 'Made in Denmark' — the defining collector watershed.
Australia's pipe community is small but keen, with active forums and a steady appetite for quality estates from every tradition. The Briar Lounge connects Australian collectors to pipes that rarely surface locally.
Pipes ship to Australia fully tracked and insured. Imports may attract GST above the low-value threshold; transit is longer than domestic, so each listing shows the seller's location to set expectations.
Our AI appraisal values your pipe against real verified sales and current listings from the Briar Index — then shows you the comparable evidence. Free, in seconds.
Appraise my StanwellAustralian GST can apply to imported goods above the low-value threshold; couriers collect it on entry. Pipes already in Australia avoid it — seller locations are shown on every listing.
Look at the country-of-manufacture stamp on the shank. Pre-2010 pipes carry 'Made in Denmark' (or, on the earliest examples from 1948–c.1982, 'REGD. No. 969-48' alongside the Denmark mark). Post-2009 pipes produced by Barontini in Italy are stamped 'Danish Design' and lack any Denmark mark. Stem material is a secondary clue: ebonite stems point to pre-1994 production; acrylic stems became standard from the mid-1990s onward.
Ivarsson was Stanwell's most prolific outside designer, contributing dozens of shapes from the late 1940s through the 1970s — notably the tomato-form shape 90 (Royal Danish 990, designed 1951) and shape 19, a bent Dublin with a protruding foot, among many documented in the Bas Stevens shape list. Because Stanwell occasionally reused shape numbers across eras, cross-checking the stem-era markers (ebonite for older originals) helps confirm genuine first-run examples.
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