It will be nice to see some reviews, give them a little rest if you can then lets hear more. Enjoy
Don’t wait for the storm to pass. Learn to dance in the rain.
they are left overs from high end limited productions cigars. if a comapany rolled 200,000 for a limited run of 150,000 the 50,000 set around an aged and than cadwell "found them in his travels" and is just labeling them and selling them as well aged high end cigars at a more afortable price.
Happiness? A good cigar, a good meal, a good cigar and a good woman - or a bad woman; it depends on how much happiness you can handle- George Burns
My understanding isn't that they are high end limited production cigars, they are just obscure and unknown cigars from random places produced by a boutique or as a "small" batch house blend. That makes them hard to get unless you travel in the cigar making countries, so this guy is "finding" them for someone he is acquainted with to sell. No doubt these are all more or less dirt cheap customs that they sell for an absurd premium to people that are likely to buy things that are HTF. Pretty brilliant idea if you have the reputation to pull it off. With that being said I'm sure they are decent smokes and the prices I've seen weren't crazy, so if you enjoy it...knock yourself out.
ps: when I said absurd premium I mean relative to the cost, not that the cigars were crazy prices.
Robert Caldwell on Impromptu cigars:
"February 20 2015 – Miami,FL
I wanted to take the time to explain Bellatto/Caldwell/Sears (Formally Impromptu). A lot of people don’t quite understand what it is, how it works, or its’ purpose. We explained it a year ago, but no one was listening then.
For years I had been travelling all over the world and brought back really cool cigars. I would always return and share them with Jaclyn and Tony and a five minute conversation about wishing we could do something with them always ensued. I have always gotten a kick out of chasing down old blends I loved, or exploring great manufacturers aging rooms and finding gems. Tony and Jaclyn pushed me to turn this into a project. Find great lost cigars. Package them. Share them with friends. This is BCS.
Last year we came to market together with this concept. It was and is Tony’s project. He decides who gets it and who does not. He runs point on the whole deal. I find the cigars and come up with the concepts. Jaclyn does the artistic side of the project. We love this project because it does not matter. It is fun. It is carefree. It is what cigars should be. It allows us to bring in really special cigars and share them with true friends. It allows me to push myself creatively. It allows me to work with friends.
BCS is not a Caldwell project. It is not a Caldwell brand. It is not even a brand. It is a concept. We do not manufacture the cigars. They are something Lost and then Found. We go after cigars that were very special when they were on the shelves and breathe new life into them. It is a chance to bring in one-off cigars that have been aged to perfection and share them with true connoisseurs. Some quantities have been as low as 100 cigars. It is the coolest thing to ever happen a second time to a great cigar.
Tony is limiting the retailers to 20. They are very hard to sell at brick and mortar retail. They come wrapped up in simple paper with catchy names and designs. He wants to keep them mainly off of store shelves. His target is online boutique, as well as social media forums and trade groups. This is where the brand is understood. He wants to keep it small and fun.
He has renamed the brand twice. 3rd time is a charm. It is called Lost&Found. Just look for the parachute.
It is an uber cool project. Tony’s contact info is [email protected]
Robert Caldwell"
We're going to need a bigger humidor
from this i take they are left over cigars from runs becasue they where lost now found. they where cigars that where once sold and these are the leftovers they have from them that have been aging. @Ropey
Happiness? A good cigar, a good meal, a good cigar and a good woman - or a bad woman; it depends on how much happiness you can handle- George Burns
I imagine with all the money they spend traveling, sampling cigars, shipping cigars, etc. -- plus the fact that they sell only "small quantities" when they do find some -- that the markup on those small quantities would have to be enormous to make it a viable business.
They might even be getting those cigars for free, simply for removing them from the "warehouses" in which they find 'em.
Because let's face it, if they're really high-quality cigars that are being stored in manufacturers' warehouses, why wouldn't those just be sold as the normal lines they were intended for? It just doesn't make sense to me.
I don't buy the concept of "lost" cigars, whether it's in the advertising copy of a CI catalog or from these folks. A cigar warehouse is not like someone's attic. There aren't boxes of cigars accidentally left under a collection of old Life magazines.
And even if it were, why would some dude wandering in off the street be able to find these "lost" cigars when the proprietors of the company themselves couldn't? And why would the company then sell these valuable "lost" cigars to some guy when they could sell them through their normal distribution outlets?
Stories about "finding" a big batch of "lost" cigars just seem like BS to me.