
Water pipes & bongs
by K. Haring
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The K. Haring Glass Bubbler is a borosilicate glass water pipe that filters smoke through an 8-slit showerhead percolator for noticeably cooler, smoother draws. Featuring hand-applied artwork by Keith Haring — the American artist whose bold figures and radiating lines defined 1980s New York street culture — this bubbler looks like it belongs in a gallery and hits like proper glassware. At roughly 14.7 x 14.7 x 16.5 cm, it sits comfortably in one hand and stays planted on any flat surface thanks to its bell-shaped base.
Most bubblers in this size range give you either decent filtration or decent looks — rarely both. The K. Haring Glass Bubbler genuinely delivers on both fronts. The 8-slit showerhead percolator breaks your smoke into fine streams through the water chamber, which cools it down before it reaches your mouth. You can hear the difference: a steady, quiet churn instead of the harsh gurgle you get from single-hole downstems. The draw resistance sits in a sweet spot — enough to know the water is doing its job, not so tight that you're fighting for airflow.
The glass itself has proper heft to it. Borosilicate is the same material used in lab equipment — it handles thermal shock without cracking, which matters when you're lighting a bowl directly above a water-filled chamber dozens of times a week. Pick it up and you'll notice the weight immediately; this isn't thin-walled novelty glass. The bell shape widens at the base, so it doesn't tip over on a bedside table or desk. We'd still keep it on a flat surface rather than balancing it on a sofa arm, but it's more forgiving than cylindrical pieces.
One honest limitation: the fixed bowl and downstem mean you can't swap in different bowl sizes or upgrade the stem. That's the trade-off for a cleaner single-piece design with fewer joints to leak or break. If you want modularity, you're looking at a full bong setup. But for a grab-and-go piece that doesn't need assembly, the fixed design is actually a plus.
The Haring designs on the neck and base are hand-applied and heat-fused into the glass surface. They won't peel, scratch off, or fade with cleaning. The imagery features Haring's signature style — interlocking figures, radiant babies, barking dogs — in bold lines against the clear glass. It's officially licensed artwork, and the presentation box mirrors the same aesthetic with thick walls and foam inserts that double as long-term storage. If you're buying this as a gift, the unboxing alone does the heavy lifting.
Compared to a plain glass bubbler at half the price, you're paying for the Haring collaboration and the presentation. If art means nothing to you and you just want filtration, a basic bubbler will do the same job mechanically. But if your smoking accessories live on a shelf in full view, this is the piece that starts conversations rather than getting hidden in a drawer.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | K. Haring Glass Collection |
| Material | Borosilicate glass |
| Dimensions | 14.7 x 14.7 x 16.5 cm |
| Percolator | 8-slit showerhead |
| Bowl Type | Fixed bowl and downstem |
| Shape | Bell-shaped (wide base) |
| Artwork | Hand-applied, heat-resistant Keith Haring designs |
| Packaging | Foam-lined presentation box with Haring imagery |
| SKU | HS0942 |
Complete your setup: pair the K. Haring Glass Bubbler with pipe screens to keep debris out of the water chamber, and a set of cleaning brushes sized for bubbler downstems. A bottle of glass cleaner keeps the Haring artwork looking sharp between sessions — resin buildup on clear glass shows fast.
Dry pipes are simple and portable, but every draw hits your throat with hot, unfiltered smoke. After a few sessions in an evening, that adds up. A full bong gives you maximum filtration and cooling, but it's a commitment — it lives on a table, needs more water, and isn't something you casually pass around. A bubbler splits the difference. The K. Haring piece holds enough water to cool your smoke meaningfully through those 8 percolator slits, but it's still a one-handed piece you can use on the sofa.
Worth noting: water filtration cools smoke and can trap some particulates, but it doesn't eliminate the health risks associated with combustion. According to Healthline, smoking through water pipes still carries respiratory risks, including a documented case of necrotizing pneumonia linked to bong use. The water makes each draw feel smoother, which can lead to deeper inhalation — something to be aware of. Moderation and regular cleaning are your best allies here.
Speaking of cleaning: bubblers with fixed downstems need attention roughly twice a week to maintain proper airflow and taste. Stale water and resin buildup don't just taste grim — they can harbour bacteria. Rinse after every session, deep clean with isopropyl alcohol and coarse salt weekly. The bell shape of the K. Haring makes swirling cleaning solution inside easier than with narrow-necked pieces.
Borosilicate glass (the same type used in Pyrex lab beakers) has a low coefficient of thermal expansion — roughly 3.3 x 10⁻⁶/K — which means it handles the repeated heating and cooling cycle of a bowl being lit without developing stress fractures. Standard soda-lime glass, which cheaper bubblers often use, is far more prone to cracking under thermal stress. You can feel the difference when you hold the K. Haring piece: it's dense, solid, and the walls have a reassuring thickness.
The 8-slit showerhead percolator is integrated into the downstem — not a separate attachment. Each slit is cut into the glass at the base of the stem, creating 8 individual channels for smoke to pass through the water. More slits means more surface area contact between smoke and water, which means more cooling and more particulate filtration per draw. For comparison, basic bubblers typically have a single open-ended downstem with 0-3 slits. The difference in smoothness is immediately noticeable.
Enough to cover the bottom of the downstem by about 1 cm. Do a test pull without lighting — if you hear bubbling but don't get water on your lips, you're spot on. Overfilling is the most common mistake and leads to splashback.
Water filtration cools the smoke and traps some heavier particulates, which makes each draw feel smoother. However, according to Healthline, water pipes don't eliminate the health risks of combustion. Smoother smoke can also encourage deeper inhalation, so be mindful of your draw.
Pour out the water after each session and rinse with warm water. For a deep clean, fill the chamber with isopropyl alcohol (90%+) and a tablespoon of coarse salt, then swirl vigorously for 2-3 minutes. Rinse thoroughly with warm water afterwards. The bell shape makes swirling easier than with narrow bubblers.
No. The bowl and downstem are fixed — they're integrated into the glass body. This gives you a cleaner design with fewer leak points, but it does mean you can't swap bowl sizes. If you need interchangeable parts, you're looking at a bong with ground glass joints instead.
A bubbler is a compact, one-piece water pipe you hold in your hand. A bong is larger, usually sits on a table, and has removable components like bowls and downstems. Both filter smoke through water, but bongs typically offer more filtration volume. The K. Haring Bubbler's 8-slit percolator closes that gap significantly for its size.
No. The designs are hand-applied and heat-fused into the borosilicate glass surface. They won't peel, chip, or fade with regular cleaning. Avoid abrasive scrubbers on the exterior artwork — stick to soft cloths or paper towels for the outside.
Borosilicate glass is significantly more resistant to thermal shock than standard glass, and the walls on this piece are thick. That said, it's still glass — a drop onto tiles will end badly. The bell-shaped base and low centre of gravity reduce the chance of tipping, and the foam-lined box is worth keeping for storage.
Last updated: April 2026