The "white dot" of Dunhill pipes first appeared on the handle of Alfred Dunhill's pipe in 1912. The famous "White Spot" trademark originally had its use value: it was used to identify the upward side of the cigarette holder.
In the early 1920s, the white labels for Alfred Dunhill pipes were originally made of ivory, but since then, many rubber-like substances have replaced ivory as the raw material for white dot labels: from treatment with resin From the fake ivory to the final hardened acrylic compound. This is because there are many problems with the use of ivory, not only because the acquisition of ivory is controversial, but also because ivory products will shrink after a period of time, causing them to fall out of the small holes in which they were originally embedded (this is why Explains why some collectors accidentally discover that there is a small hole in the handle of the Dunhill pipe in their collection, but the white mark that should be there is missing).
However, Alfred Dunhill was not the first to use white dots as the exclusive mark of his pipes. It should be the German Vauen pipe production company. Its company history can be traced back to 1948 and it officially began to use similar white dot marks in 1911, a full year earlier than Alfred Dunhill. In the end, Alfred Dunhill agreed that Vauen would continue to sell its cars with white dots in Germany. pipes (still in use today), but when their products were exported to Germany, they should use gray and white points instead.