
Lighters & torches
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The Green Flame Pocket Torch Leaf is a refillable butane pocket torch that produces a distinctive green-tinted flame for better visibility when lighting bowls, herbs, and concentrates. The coloured flame comes from a copper-compound additive in the combustion chamber — same principle as those green fireworks, just miniaturised into something that fits your back pocket. It weighs next to nothing, fires up on the first click, and the embossed golden cannabis leaf on the body gives it a bit of character without screaming for attention.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| SKU | HS1920 |
| Flame type | Jet torch — green tinted |
| Fuel | Butane (refillable) |
| Ignition | Piezo-electric click |
| Body material | Metal alloy with matte finish |
| Design detail | Embossed golden cannabis leaf |
| Size | Pocket-sized (fits standard trouser pocket) |
| Wind resistant | Yes — jet flame |
Complete your smoking setup — pair this torch with a steel herb grinder for an even, consistent grind before you light up. A small rolling tray keeps everything in one place and saves your table from burn marks.
A green flame is easier to see than a regular orange one, especially outdoors. That sounds like a small thing until you're cupping a standard Bic in the wind at a festival, burning your thumb, and still not getting the bowl lit. The jet flame on this torch cuts through wind without flinching — it's a focused, directional flame rather than the soft, flickering kind you get from a disposable.
We've sold thousands of lighters over the years, and the number one complaint about cheap ones is always the same: they die in the wind or they run out of gas in a week. This one is refillable, so you top it up with a standard butane canister (the same ones you'd use for any kitchen torch) and carry on. The metal body has a decent weight to it — not heavy, but enough that it doesn't feel like a toy. You can feel the click of the piezo ignition through the housing, and it fires reliably even when the gas is running low.
The honest limitation? Like any pocket torch, the flame is narrow. Brilliant for bowls, pipes, and concentrates where you want pinpoint heat. Less practical for rolling papers — a softer flame works better there because you're less likely to scorch the paper before the herb catches. If you mostly smoke joints, a classic clipper lighter might serve you better. But for bongs, pipes, and anything where precision matters, a torch is the way to go.
The green flame gets comments. We've had customers pull this out at the counter to test it and the person next to them immediately asks where to get one. It's a small thing — a lighter is a lighter — but the colour genuinely makes it more visible in low light, and the embossed gold leaf design has a nice tactile quality under your thumb. It's not going to change your life, but it's the kind of everyday object that's just a bit more satisfying to use than the generic alternative. We've been stocking smoking accessories since 1999, and the lighters that sell best are always the ones that do something slightly different without being gimmicky. This one hits that mark.
One thing to watch: don't overfill the butane. If gas starts spraying out the sides when you fill, you've gone too far. Bleed the excess by pressing the refill valve with a small screwdriver or pen tip, wait a minute, then try again. Overfilling is the main reason pocket torches misfire or produce a weak, sputtering flame.
The green colour comes from a copper-based compound in the combustion path. When butane burns through it, the copper ions emit green light — the same chemistry behind green fireworks. It doesn't affect the heat output or fuel efficiency.
Yes. It produces a focused jet flame rather than a soft diffused one, so it holds up well in wind. Not indestructible in a gale, but far more reliable outdoors than a standard flint lighter.
Roughly 15–20 minutes of continuous flame time, which translates to several hundred short lights. Actual duration depends on the flame height setting and how long you hold the button each time.
Most pocket torches in this form factor have a flame adjustment wheel on the base. Turn it with a small flathead screwdriver or coin to increase or decrease the flame size.
Use refined butane gas — the kind sold in pressurised canisters for lighter refills. Avoid cheap, unrefined butane as it clogs the jet nozzle over time and causes misfires. Any standard lighter refill canister with a universal nozzle tip will fit.
For bowls and pipes, yes — the focused flame gives you precise control and lets you corner the bowl. For joints and rolled cigarettes, a softer flame from a standard lighter is usually easier to manage. It depends on what you smoke most.
Bleed any remaining gas by pressing the refill valve with a pen tip until hissing stops. Refill with fresh butane, wait 2–3 minutes, and try again. If it still won't light, the piezo igniter may need replacing — but at this price point, grabbing a new one is more practical.
Last updated: April 2026