Rising from relative novelty and obscurity, bubblers are becoming the hottest thing on the smoking market these days. Bubblers were even featured on our Best Pipes of 2018. They provide a portable way to get a pipe-sized hit with bong-style filtration. They come in multiple styles, such as hammer bubblers, and have set the new standard for quality in low-key water pipes. With this new garnered fame obviously people are asking themselves, “How are bubblers made?”
Making the Neck
Like many other glass pieces, a hammer bubbler starts out as an inconspicuous glass pipe. The glassmaker uses a torch to singe closed one end of the rod and creates a starting point for the stem of the piece.
The flame is put over the center of the glass bulb, similar to the way it would be when making a glass pipe. This is done to narrow the mouthpiece and differentiate it from the rest of the stem. The piece is stretched and pulled until it reaches the preferred length and thickness. A blow-tube is connected to the bubbler’s mouthpiece, allowing the glassblower to force air into the stem to shape and size it.
The glassblower punctures a hole at this spherical end with a pair of jacks, which are like heavy-duty tweezers. They then snip excess glass off of the end of the stem in order to ensure that the piece has a flat edge to attach to the body of the hammer bubbler, it’s “can.”
Making the Body
With a handle attached to the bottom of the can, the glassblower is able to use gravity to stretch out the size and shape of their can until it reaches the height they prefer. The bowl end is blown into and made spherical before being punctured on the side to create the bubbler’s carb hole.
Making the Bowl
Connecting Everything
A hole is created on the back side of the body to connect the base with the neck. The two pieces are torched together to form an airtight, bubble-free seal. The handle that remains attached to the mouthpiece is transformed into a supporting “bridge,” which is bent around into a temporary reinforcing structure that helps the glassblower double back on any glass joints that need to be re-sealed with a flame. The bridge is then snipped off and the bottom of the bubbler reshaped into a sphere before being flattened at the right angle to support itself on a table.
Final Steps
Once the mouthpiece is shaped, the carb opened, and all extra glass handles removed, the bubbler is annealed to help relieve the heat stress placed on the glass during the production process. This ensures that the piece won’t break under a temperature change, obviously an important step in finishing up a smoking piece.
For a refresher course on not just bubblers but all kinds of hand pipes, read our Beginner’s Guide to Pipes.
If you like learning about how certain glass is made, check out our other walkthroughs including:
- published by DankStop