
Smoking pipes
by Empire Glassworks
A spoon pipe is a handheld smoking pipe shaped like a spoon — wide bowl at one end, flat mouthpiece at the other — that lets you pack, light, and smoke dry herbs in seconds without any water, batteries, or setup. This one from Empire Glassworks is made from borosilicate glass, weighs a solid 320 grams in your hand, and comes in randomised custom designs that make each piece genuinely one-of-a-kind. At just under 11cm long, it disappears into a jacket pocket but feels substantial enough that you won't worry about snapping it on the first use.
The Empire Glassworks spoon pipe sits in that sweet spot between disposable gas-station glass and artisan pieces that cost ten times as much. Borosilicate glass — the same stuff lab beakers are made from — handles rapid temperature changes without cracking. That matters because cheap soda-lime glass pipes tend to develop stress fractures after a few weeks of daily use, and then one day they just split in your hand. Not ideal.
At 320 grams, this pipe has genuine heft. Pick it up and you can feel the thick walls — there's no wobble, no thin spots where the glass tapers to nothing. The bowl is deep enough for a proper session but not so cavernous that you're wasting herb. The carb hole on the left side gives you direct control over airflow: cover it while you light, release it to clear the chamber. Simple mechanics, zero learning curve.
The one thing to flag: you don't get to choose your colour. Empire Glassworks assigns designs at random, so what arrives might be a deep ocean blue, a fiery orange swirl, or something else entirely. If you order more than one, our warehouse does its best to send you different designs — but no guarantees. Honestly, the surprise is half the fun. We've seen customers order two and end up with a favourite they'd never have picked themselves.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | Empire Glassworks |
| Material | Borosilicate glass |
| Length | 10.80 cm |
| Width | 4.45 cm |
| Height | 3.18 cm |
| Weight | 320 g |
| Carb hole | Yes (left side) |
| Design | Random custom colour/pattern |
| SKU | HS1890 |
A glass spoon pipe is the simplest way to smoke dry herbs — no water to fill, no screens to replace, no charging cables. Here's how it stacks up against the usual alternatives so you can decide what fits your routine.
| Feature | Spoon Pipe | Bubbler | Rolling Papers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Setup time | 0 seconds — pack and go | 30 seconds (fill water) | 1-2 minutes (grind and roll) |
| Portability | Fits in a pocket (10.80cm) | Bulkier, water can spill | Most portable once rolled |
| Flavour | Clean, pure taste from glass | Slightly cooled, still clean | Paper taste mixed in |
| Smoothness | Direct hit, can be warm | Water-cooled, smoother | Varies with paper thickness |
| Cleaning | Isopropyl soak, pipe cleaner | More fiddly (water chamber) | None — single use |
| Durability | Years with borosilicate glass | Years, but more fragile shapes | Single use |
| Dose control | Excellent — small bowl, carb hole | Good | Harder to micro-dose |
If you want the smoothest possible hit, a bubbler with water filtration wins. But if you want something you can toss in a bag and use anywhere without prep, the spoon pipe is the best glass pipe for everyday carry. We'd pick this over papers every time — no rolling skill required, no wasted herb from a badly sealed joint, and you taste the flower, not the paper.
Resin builds up fast, and a clogged pipe means restricted airflow, harsher hits, and muted flavour. Clean it once a week if you're using it daily — takes about 10 minutes and makes a noticeable difference.
Drop the pipe into a zip-lock bag with isopropyl alcohol (90% or higher) and a tablespoon of coarse salt. Shake it gently for 2-3 minutes. The alcohol dissolves the resin while the salt acts as an abrasive on the inside walls. Rinse thoroughly with warm water afterwards — you don't want alcohol residue. For stubborn spots in the bowl or around the carb hole, a pipe cleaner or cotton bud does the trick. Let it air-dry completely before your next session.
One honest limitation: the randomised design means some colour patterns show resin buildup more than others. Darker swirls hide it; lighter, translucent designs show every speck. Not a dealbreaker, just something to be aware of — and another reason to stay on top of cleaning.
Complete your setup with a proper herb grinder — a consistent grind makes a real difference to how evenly your bowl burns. Pipe cleaners and isopropyl alcohol are also worth grabbing if you don't already have them. A small stash jar keeps your ground herb fresh between sessions.
We've been selling smoking accessories since 1999, and spoon pipes have never gone out of rotation. Vaporisers come and go, rolling techniques trend on social media, but the spoon pipe just sits there being reliable. There's a reason for that: zero points of failure. No battery to die at the wrong moment. No water to spill in your bag. No papers to run out of at 11pm.
The Empire Glassworks version specifically earns its spot because of the borosilicate construction and the weight. We've handled plenty of cheap glass pipes that feel like Christmas ornaments — paper-thin walls, uneven bowls, carb holes drilled at weird angles. This one feels like a tool, not a novelty. The 4.45cm width gives your fingers something to grip, and 320 grams means it sits stable on a table instead of rolling off the edge.
The carb hole placement is worth mentioning too. Left-side carb is standard and works naturally for right-handed smokers. If you're left-handed, it still works — you just hold it slightly differently. After a session or two, it becomes muscle memory regardless.
For anyone who's been rolling joints and wants to switch to something that wastes less herb, a spoon pipe is the best entry point. You pack exactly what you want to smoke, and the carb gives you control over each hit. No sidestream smoke drifting off a lit joint, no half-smoked roaches to deal with.
A spoon pipe is a handheld glass smoking pipe shaped like a spoon — a rounded bowl for your herb, a carb hole for airflow control, and a straight stem ending in a flat mouthpiece. It's the most common type of glass hand pipe and the simplest way to smoke dry herbs without water filtration or rolling.
The carb (short for carburettor) controls airflow. Cover it while lighting to fill the chamber with smoke, then release it while inhaling to clear the pipe with fresh air. It lets you control hit size — small release for a light draw, full release for a bigger hit.
Once a week if you use it daily. Soak in 90%+ isopropyl alcohol with coarse salt for 2-3 minutes, shake gently, then rinse with warm water. A clean pipe means better flavour, easier draws, and no resin chunks pulling through.
Borosilicate is far more resistant to thermal shock and stress than regular glass, but it's not indestructible. A drop onto carpet or grass — probably fine. A drop onto tiles or concrete from waist height — you're rolling the dice. The 320g weight and thick walls help, but treat it with basic care.
No — colours are assigned at random. If you order multiple pipes, our warehouse will try to send different designs, but there's no guarantee. Each pipe features a unique custom pattern from Empire Glassworks, so every piece is a one-off.
Different tools for different situations. A bubbler filters smoke through water, giving cooler and smoother hits. A spoon pipe skips the water, making it more portable and zero-maintenance. If you're at home, a bubbler is smoother. If you're out and about, the spoon pipe wins on convenience every time.
Not strictly necessary. The bowl hole is sized to hold a normal grind without pull-through. If you prefer an extra-fine grind, a small glass or brass screen stops debris from reaching your mouth. They cost almost nothing and are worth having on hand.
Last updated: April 2026