BongIn quality glass pipes water bongs and accessory headshop

shopping cart your shopping cart
Bongin glass pipes and bongs.
Water bong with crafted starfish, silver fumed for nice color changing effect. Stem with fixed bowl is fitted in rubber grommet - it can be removed for cleaning. Carb hole on the back.
NEW IN STORE !
$33.20
Starfish water bong
Water bong with crafted red crawfish, silver fumed for nice color changing effect. Stem with fixed bowl is fitted in rubber grommet - it can be removed for cleaning. Carb hole on the back.
NEW IN STORE !
$33.20
Crawfish water bong
Gilded water bong hand blown with focus on usability and green-gold shades. Combination that represents natural gold hidden in plants that we can smoke. Simple and user-proven shape, large pot-bowl, more than sufficient capacity for water and ice-catcher directly below water chamber. That all makes this great bong almost perfect.
NEW IN STORE !
$78.50
Green gold
All the sperm shaped glass pipes decorated with various colors and patterns. Five very cool glass pipes for extra price!
NEW IN STORE !
$34.40
gr8 glass pipes set
Classic medium sized pocket glass pipe - triagle shaped head bowl and twisted body. Decorated with red lines.
NEW IN STORE !
$11.00
Red triangle - glass hand pipe
Glass pipe made from clear glass with twisted red and blue stripes. Marbles on the right side of bowl, carb hole on the left side.
NEW IN STORE !
$15.50
Medium clear twister pipe
Nice classic one-hitter, slightly silver fumed with death bones.
NEW IN STORE !
$5.30
Pirate glass one hitter
Pure glass pipe, looks like a big sperm. Carb hole on the left side. Smoke your sperm now!
NEW IN STORE !
$5.90
Sperm pipe
Diffuser stem 18.5mm
NEW IN STORE !
$11.20
Diffuser stem 18.5mm - 210mm
Glassic glass pipe made from clear glass decorated with blue and red twisted stripes.
NEW IN STORE !
$9.70
Small clear twister pipe
Premium glass pipe made from thick glass. Inside-out blown glass with decent silver fuming and great colors in several marbled glass tubes inside! Also have really fat bowl and carb hole on the left side! Best buy pipe now, limited stock!
NEW IN STORE !
$49.20
Mixed color heavy pipe
Classic shaped and sized bubbler, twisted parallel embossed stripes around the mouthpiece. Colored by rad and white stripes and heavily silver fumed for best color changing effect. Removable bowl fitted in rubber grommet. Carb hole on the left side of bubbler base. owl is decorated with three marbles with red spiral.
NEW IN STORE !
$50.60
Blood river CCG bubbler
Very handy shape, great feel in hand, Hard borosillicate glass (Pyrex), inside-out fuming, gorgeous marbled glass decorations inside glass, fat bowl, carb on the left and stability marble od the right! What else can you want? Great value for a price!
NEW IN STORE !
$49.20
Premium hand pipe - model 3
Simple pure glass bong with easy removable glass on glass slider. Bow shaped mouthpiece. Looks like laboratory glass. 100% hand blown glass. Some pieces can have engraved bongin logo on the side.
NEW IN STORE !
$49.90
Clear white curved bong
Premium glass pipe made from thick glass. Inside-out blown glass with decent silver fuming and great colors in several marbled glass tubes inside! Also have really fat bowl and carb hole on the left side! Best buy pipe now, limited stock!
NEW IN STORE !
$49.20
Mixed color heavy pipe - model 2
Water bong with crafted cobra, silver fumed for ncie color changing effect. Stem with fixed bowl is fitted in rubber grommet - it can be removed for cleaning. Carb hole on the back.
NEW IN STORE !
$33.20
Cobra water bong
Simple bong made from laboratory glass tube. Equipped with double part bowl and downstem with diffuser.
NEW IN STORE !
$59.50
Middle tube bong - 500ml
Gold fumed glass chillum with large pot and interesting design. Gold-ping color with color changing effect when used.
NEW IN STORE !
$9.30
Pink glAss hole chillum
Classic shaped medium size water bong with ice catcher. Made from white glass (Pyrex) and decorated with clear glass spiral and cannabis leaf in green glass painting.
NEW IN STORE !
$55.70
Clear bong w cannabis leaf
Premium glass pipe made from thick glass. Inside-out blown glass roudned (fat) shape with extra small bulb mouthpiece. Red variations in several marbled glass tubes inside! Also have really fat bowl and carb hole on the left side! Best buy pipe now, limited stock!
NEW IN STORE !
$49.20
Red marbled eels - heavy hand pipe
 

Hot news bulletin (click to read all)

 

Glassblowing

Glassblowing is the process of forming glass into useful shapes while the glass is in a molten, semi-liquid state. A person who blows glass is called a glassblower, glasssmith, or gaffer.

History

While the first evidence of man-made glass occurs in Mesopotamia in the Late-Third/Early-Second Millennium B.C., the actual "blowing" of glass using a tube did not occur until sometime in the First century BC in Roman Syria. This advancement transformed the material's usefulness from a time-consuming process in which the medium was hot-formed around rough cores of mud and dung into a mass-producible material which could be quickly inflated into large, transparent, and leakproof vessels. Glassblowing techniques spread throughout the Roman world. Venice, particularly the island of Murano, became a centre for high quality glass manufacture in the late medieval period.

The relatively recent "studio glass movement" began in 1962 when Harvey Littleton, a ceramics professor, and Dominick Labino, a chemist and engineer, held two workshops at the Toledo Museum of Art, during which they began experimenting with melting glass in a small furnace and creating blown glass art. Thus Littleton and Labino are credited with being the first to make molten glass available to artists working in private studios. This approach to glassblowing blossomed into a worldwide movement, producing such flamboyant and prolific artists as Dale Chihuly, Dante Marioni, Fritz Driesbach and Marvin Lipofsky. Lino Tagliapietra was the first Murano-trained artist to leave and spread his knowledge in the United States. In 1971, Dale Chihuly began the Pilchuck Glass School near Stanwood, Washington. The Pilchuck School of Glass became the source of a great deal of the current American Studio Glass movement, and continues as such today.

In addition to glassblowing as an art, many individuals pursue glassblowing as a hobby,. In fact, it is one of the fastest growing hobbies in North America.

Process

Traditionally, the glass was melted in furnaces from the raw ingredients of sand, limestone, soda ash, potash and other compounds. The transformation of raw materials into glass takes place well above 2000°F (1100°C); the glass turns into a burnt orange color, the glass is then left to "fine out" (allowing the bubbles to rise out of the mass), and then the working temperature is reduced in the furnace to around 2000°F (1100°C). "Soda-lime" glass remains somewhat plastic and workable, however, as low as 1000°F (550°C).

Glassblowing involves three furnaces. The first, which contains a crucible of molten glass, is simply referred to as "the furnace." The second is called the "Glory Hole", and is used to reheat a piece in between steps of working with it. The final furnace is called the "lehr" or "annealer", and is used to slowly cool the glass, over a period of a few hours to a few days, depending on the size of the pieces. This keeps the glass from cracking due to thermal stress. Historically, all three furnaces were contained in one, with a set of progressively cooler chamber for each of the three purposes. Many glassblowing studios in Mexico and South America still employ this method.


The major tools involved are the blowpipe, the punty (or pontil), bench, marver, blocks, jacks, paddles, tweezers, and a variety of shears. The tip of the blowpipe is first preheated; then dipped in the molten glass in the furnace. The molten glass is 'gathered' on to the blowpipe in much the same way that honey is picked up on a dipper.

 
Glass created from complex murrine and zanfirico cane can possess a great deal of detail.Then, this glass is rolled on the marver, which was traditionally a flat slab of marble, but today is more commonly a fairly thick flat sheet of steel. This forms a cool skin on the exterior of the molten glass and shapes it. Then air is blown into the pipe, creating a bubble. Then, one can gather over that bubble to create a larger piece. Blocks are ladle-like tools made from water-soaked fruit wood and are used similarly to the marver to shape and cool a piece in the early steps of creation. The bench is a glassblower's workstation, and has a place for the glassblower to sit, a place for the handheld tools, and two rails that the pipe or punty rides on while the blower works with the piece. Jacks are a tool shaped somewhat like large tweezers with two blades. Jacks are used for forming shape later in the creation of a piece. Paddles are flat pieces of wood or graphite used for creating flat spots like a bottom. Tweezers are used to pick out details or to pull on the glass. There are two important types of shears, straight shears and diamond shears. Straight shears are essentially bulky scissors, used for making linear cuts. Diamond shears have blades that form a diamond shape when partially open. These are used for cutting off masses of glass. Once a piece has been blown to its approximate final size, the bottom is finalized. Then, the piece is transferred to a punty, and the top is finalized. There are many ways to apply patterns and color to blown glass, including rolling molten glass in powdered color or larger pieces of colored glass called frit. Complex patterns with great detail can be created through the use of cane (rods of colored glass) and murrine (rods cut in cross-sections to reveal patterns). These pieces of color can be arranged in a pattern and 'picked up' by rolling a bubble of molten glass over them.


A lampworker, usually operating on a much smaller scale, historically used alcohol lamps and breath or bellows-driven air to create a hot flame at a workbench to manipulate preformed glass rods and tubes. These stock materials took form as laboratory glass, beads, and durable scientific "specimens" — miniature glass sculpture. The craft, which was raised to an art form in the late 1960's by Hans Godo Frabel (later followed by lampwork artists such as Milon Townsend and Robert Mickelson), is still practised today. The modern lampworker uses a flame of oxygen and propane or natural gas. The modern torch permits working both the soft glass from the furnace worker and the borosilicate glass (pyrex) of the scientific glassblower who may have multiple headed torches and special lathes to help form the glass or fused quartz used for special projects. The molten glass is attached to a stainless steel or iron rod called a punty (or a punty rod, a pontil, or a mandrel) for shaping and transferring a hollow piece from the blowpipe for an opening to create from.

 

Copyrights

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Glassblowing.

 

Customers service 

Discreet shipping

We use only plain boxes containing only your address and owners personal address. There is no company name stated.

Delivery time

10 business days within the USA.

Payments accepted

Credit card, cachiers check and cash payments accepted.

Damage caused by shipment

Our policy is to replace damaged items for free.

Credit card statement

The description "hand-blown art" will be reflected on your credit card statement.
read more here...