As someone who has spent well over 30 years years making and selling pipe bags to the worlds top solo pipers and pipe bands I am often asked my opinion on piping products in general and in particular pipe bags. So as there seems to be a lot of mystery about it I thought I would try to explain a little bit about pipe bags firstly. As time goes on other subjects of piping interest can be tackled.
In many bagpipes through out the world the bag used is traditionally the leather bag – perhaps sheepskin, cow hide, goat, possibly elk, or dog. The bag is made using the whole skin of the sheep or goat or part of the cow skin as it is a lot bigger with the head forefeet and hind quarters removed. In the Mediterranean area the skins are tied to create the bag but the highland bagpipe is cut from a pattern and sown by hand.
We have today synthetic materials being used as pipe bags – Gortex, woven nylon with zippers or clamps and various other combinations but essentially all similar. Most of the synthetic bags seem to do the job of holding the air and dispersing moisture from the breath but only to a moderate degree. Some pipers will find these bags to their satisfaction. I would suggest that greater success would be achieved with the leather bag either sheepskin or hide. The main advantage that attracts pipers is the apparent lack of maintenance, which the synthetic bags proclaim. This is certainly true for gortex and suits the very occasional player but it has other problems such as being floppy and also moisture retentive.
We should consider that a pipe bag also acts as your sound box and it is crucial to the final tone that you will get from your bagpipe. It is fundamental to have the correct bag on as the wrong one will not give the comfort or tonal platform to work from i.e. if its not right your bagpipe pipe will be very erratic and unstable.
The skins used go through a very rigorous selection process. The sheep in particular have to be finely graded as size skin and damage make many unusable. Many thousands are sorted to be left with only the best. The type of skin is also important with sheep from Norway, Iceland and Britain all being used. The tanning process is also crucial to the skin.
We use alum as a tanning agent for sheep and chrome for the cows. There are many processes to go through until it the skin is fully cured. It is in fact a bit like baking a cake. In both cases the end result is always slightly different. It is usually desirable to have a slightly greasy feel. The main thing is to let the skin breath. The tanning process is quite complex and takes quite a bit of explanation but James Begg keeps a close eye on it so that a high standard is maintained.
This will vary from piper to piper but on average 1 to 2 years for sheep and 3 to 4 for cow Bags will be able to be used for a long time after this period but from a hygiene and tonal point of view it is advised to change them.
Leather is a beautiful material. Its soft, tough natural, pleasant to work with can not be copied and has been around since the beginning of time. It will only smell if kept too long or is badly looked after. If some one says their bag smells - you now know why. Leather is certainly more appealing than metal clamps o - rings and cat litter.
Cow -for very hot climate where you want to retain moisture or when piper does not play on a regular basis.
Sheep - for absorbing moisture sheepskin is unbeatable - needs a bit of maintenance but its very straight forward.
Bag making is a craft and not an exact science. You need patience, knowledge of piping and plenty of practice to be good at it. Having made the bag it is also crucial to have it well fitted and this is where the success of the Begg bag has come from. Its not just being competent at one stage but putting all of them together to create the perfect bag; time and time again.