
Smoking pipes
by K. Haring
We'll only email you about this product — no marketing.
The K. Haring Glass Spoon is a hammer-style spoon pipe crafted from borosilicate glass and wrapped in the unmistakable bold-line artwork of Keith Haring. It is a compact, lightweight pipe that delivers clean flavour through a flat mouthpiece and wide-rimmed base — and it looks genuinely brilliant sitting on your coffee table or tucked into a jacket pocket. If you want a glass spoon pipe that doubles as a conversation piece, this is the one we'd grab off the shelf.
Keith Haring's street-inspired designs are hand-applied with heat-resistant techniques directly onto the neck and base of the pipe. The colours are vivid, the lines are thick and graphic, and the whole thing ships in a presentation box that carries Haring's signature style too. We've handled a fair few art-branded pipes over the years, and the print quality on these stands out — it doesn't feel like a sticker job. The designs are baked into the glass.
A glass spoon pipe is one of the simplest, most effective ways to smoke dry herbs. No water, no batteries, no faffing about — just pack, light, and inhale. The K. Haring spoon takes that simplicity and adds genuine craftsmanship. The borosilicate glass (the same stuff used in lab equipment) handles heat without cracking, and at roughly the size of your palm, it slips into a pocket without any bulk.
The flat mouthpiece is a nice touch that cheaper spoon pipes skip. It sits comfortably against your lips instead of poking at them, and the wide-rimmed base gives you a solid grip and better airflow than narrow-bowled alternatives. You get thicker, cooler draws without having to pull hard. For a dry pipe, the flavour is surprisingly clean — borosilicate doesn't impart any taste the way metal or wood can.
One honest limitation: this is a dry pipe, so the smoke isn't filtered through water. If you're used to a bong or bubbler, the hits will feel warmer and more direct. That said, for a quick session or a portable option, a glass spoon pipe is hard to beat. And this one looks far better than the generic clear-glass spoons you'll find elsewhere.
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Brand | K. Haring Glass Collection |
| Pipe Style | Hammer-style spoon pipe |
| Material | Borosilicate glass |
| Mouthpiece | Flat |
| Base | Wide-rimmed for airflow and grip |
| Design | Hand-applied, heat-resistant Keith Haring artwork |
| Size | Compact — fits in a jacket pocket |
| Weight | Lightweight |
| Packaging | Presentation box with Haring artwork |
| SKU | HS0941 |
Complete your setup with a decent grinder — evenly ground herb packs better and burns more consistently in a spoon pipe bowl. A set of pipe cleaners and some isopropyl alcohol will also keep this piece looking sharp between sessions. If you want water filtration on the go, have a look at our pocket bubblers for a step up in smoothness.
We've sold pipes in every material going — metal, wood, ceramic, silicone, glass. Glass wins on flavour, full stop. Borosilicate glass is chemically inert, so you taste your herb and nothing else. Metal pipes can leave a tinny edge on each draw. Wood pipes pick up residue over time and start tasting like yesterday's session. Glass stays neutral, session after session, as long as you keep it clean.
The other thing: a spoon pipe is the fastest way from "I want a smoke" to actually smoking. No water to fill, no screens to replace, no charging cables. Pack the bowl, spark up, done. The K. Haring spoon does this job well and adds something most pipes don't — it actually looks like something you'd want to leave out on a shelf. The Haring artwork makes it a genuine display piece. We've seen customers buy two: one for use, one for the mantelpiece. The presentation box helps if you're giving it as a gift, too.
The weight is worth mentioning. Borosilicate glass is lighter than soda-lime glass (the cheap stuff), so this pipe doesn't feel like a brick in your hand. It's the kind of piece you can hold between two fingers without fatigue, even through a longer session. The ergonomic grip from the wide-rimmed base helps there as well — your fingers wrap around it naturally instead of pinching.
Resin builds up fast in any glass pipe, and it dulls both the flavour and the artwork. Here is the simplest method we know — and the one we actually use behind the counter:
Clean your glass spoon pipe every 5–10 sessions for the best flavour. You'll also keep the Haring artwork looking crisp — resin film over those bold lines is a shame.
A glass spoon pipe is a handheld dry pipe shaped roughly like a spoon — a bowl at one end, a stem with a mouthpiece at the other, and a carb hole on the side for airflow control. It is the most common type of glass smoking pipe and works without water.
Borosilicate glass is the same material used in laboratory glassware and high-end cookware. It handles thermal shock far better than regular glass and resists cracking from repeated heating and cooling. That said, drop it on tiles and it will break — glass is glass. Treat it with basic care and it will last years.
Soak it in 90%+ isopropyl alcohol with coarse salt for 30 minutes, shake gently, and rinse under warm water. The hand-applied artwork is heat-resistant and won't come off during cleaning. Avoid abrasive brushes on the decorated surfaces.
Borosilicate glass is chemically inert, so it adds no taste to the smoke. Compared to metal or wood pipes, glass gives you the purest flavour from your herb. Keep it clean and each session tastes as fresh as the first.
The designs are hand-applied using heat-resistant techniques and fused to the borosilicate glass. They won't peel, chip, or wash off during normal use and cleaning. It is not a decal or sticker — the artwork is part of the pipe's surface.
The K. Haring glass spoon is designed for dry herb. The open bowl shape doesn't retain concentrates well, and you'd need a dab tool and different heat source. Stick to ground dry herb for the best results with this pipe.
A spoon pipe delivers drier, warmer hits because there is no water filtration. The trade-off is portability and speed — no filling, no spilling, no setup. If smoothness is your priority, a bubbler is a step up. If convenience and flavour purity matter more, the glass spoon wins.
Last updated: April 2026