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David Thow, pre-1916, ebony, ivory, plain silver slides set #1
This is first of twin Thow sets acquired at the same time, and clearly made at the same time.
The Thow pipemaking company made instruments from 1861-1953, starting with the patriarch, John, and followed by his son David, who took the company over when John died in 1879. The chanter is labelled “David Thow, Dundee.” David died in 1916, so these pipes could have been made anytime between 1879 and 1916. David and John Thow were superb pipemakers, contempory with the MacDougalls and Centers, and made pipes of comparable quality.
Both sets of pipes appear to have been in storage for quite some time, as evidenced by the very uneven staining on the ivory. The pipes are ebony with full ivory mounts and plain silver slides, unhallmarked.
There were no cracks in the pipes themselves, though the chanter had cracked and has now been restored. The drones required no work at all, not even refinishing. There is some spider-cracking on the ivory, but this is cosmetic, and none of the pieces is threatened. One tenor stock had a hairline crack and has been invisible whipped. As seen in the photos, the cord guides and the sleeved ivory ferrules on the tuning chambers are quite distinctive, the latter being adopted later by William Sinclair.
The pipes are not as full as a MacDougall set, but not as mellow as most David Glen pipes. The tone is rich, refined and steady without being overpowering. The drones tune slightly lower on the pins that some other sets, so this set would be particularly suited to someone playing a flatter pitch. The chanter plays, but would be a challenge to reed consistently.
Thow pipes are rare, and are should be viewed as one of the prime pipes made in their day. Of the twin sets listed here, while both play equally as well, this set has more consistent ivory colouring and would be the most desirable.