Category: American Glass Hand Pipes
Showing 55–63 of 148 results
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American Glass Hand Pipes
5″ Spoon Pipe with Flower Implosion Marble
This spoon-shaped hand-pipe is transparent black and has a flower implosion marble to the right of the bowl.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
5″ Spoon Pipe with Fumed Implosion Marble
This spoon-shaped hand-pipe is transparent black and has a fumed implosion marble.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
6″ Cobalt Blue Spoon Pipe with Wigwag
This cobalt blue spoon pipe has a trippy wigwag on the front.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
6″ Cobalt Blue Spoon Pipe with Reversal
This cobalt blue spoon pipe has a trippy reversal on the front.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
6″ Cobalt Blue Spoon Pipe with Reversal
This cobalt blue spoon-shaped hand-pipe has a trippy reversal on the front.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
4″ Clear Spoon Pipe with Reversal
This small 4″ clear spoon pipe has an earthy toned reversal pattern on the front and a small amount of extra fine blue frit on the stem.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
6″ Black Spoon Pipe with Wigwag
This spoon pipe is approximately 6″ long. It is black with a fire and ice themed wigwag on the front.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
4″ Clear Spoon Pipe with Dot Stack
This 4″ clear spoon pipe has a decorative green dot stack pattern on the front.
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American Glass Hand Pipes
Rockin’ A Glass 4″ Spoon Pipe with Cane Work & Wigwag
This beautiful glass pipe was made by Rockin’ A Glass in Gresham, TX. It is fumed with gold and has lots of different cane (or twisty cane) work for a trippy and fun feel. Because the pipe is fumed with gold, the coloring will gradually change the more it gets used.
The colorful “wigwag” pattern on the front of the pipe adds vibrant playful vibes. In laymen’s terms, the wigwag pattern is made by melting long and skinny different colored glass rods together to make colorful and contrasting line tubing. And then the glass blower starts turning, twisting, and pulling that line tubing back and forth in small sections to make that wavy look. It takes a bit of prep work, which is why pipes with this pattern are usually a bit more expensive.
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