Gandalf Hand Pipe Opal Green

3186

Gandalf Hand Pipe Opal Green

Smoke like a wizard with this Red Eye Glass® Gandalf Hand Pipe. Made of 100% borosilicate glass, it has an iconic shape that is sure to turn heads and a wide bowl that makes it perfect for sharing or multiple hits. Available in a variety of sizes.

 

Product Features:
- 100% borosilicate glass
- Variety of sizes

What's Included:
1 x Opal Green Gandalf Hand Pipe


RED EYE GLASS is the number #1 distributor hand made glass pipes in Canada and the USA. All RED EYE GLASS hand pipes, water pipes, bubblers and smoking accessories are hand made and
of high quality.


Glass is naturally attractive and alluring to the eye. Glass is also tasteless, odourless and doesn't impart any other impurities into the smoke. We offer a range of high quality glass smoking pipes with tantalizing designs and a plethora of colours. If you want to stand out in a crowd, you certainly can with this selection of glass pipes.


All glass pipes are crafted by hand; therefore no two pipes are exactly alike.

From Wikipedia
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churchwarden_pipe
Churchwarden pipe
A churchwarden pipe is a pipe with a long stem. Some churchwarden pipes can be as long as 16 inches (40 cm). In German the style is referred to as "Lesepfeife" or "reading pipe," presumably because the longer stem allowed an unimpeded view of one's book, and smoke doesn't form near the reader's eyes, allowing one to look down.
Such pipes were very popular as an Oriental influence from the 17th century onwards in Europe. They remained most popular in Eastern Europe, as an emblem of the "Hussars," cavalry troops with roots in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, who went from Russia to France and England during the Napoleonic Wars and brought the pipes with them. It was even known as the "Hussar pipe" at the time. Engraved portraits exist of men smoking such an instrument. This long stem pipe type has its origins in the Ottoman Empire, geographically and historically.
Churchwarden pipes generally produce a cooler smoke due to the distance smoke must travel from the bowl to the mouthpiece. They have the added benefit of keeping the user's face further away from the heat and smoke produced by combustion in the bowl. They are also more prone to breakage since more pressure is placed on the tenon when the pipe is supported around the mouthpiece. Long ago, churchwarden pipes were made of clay and were common in taverns, and sometimes a set of pipes would have been owned by the establishment and used by different clients like other service items (plates, tankards, etc.).
Churchwarden pipes were reputedly named after churchwardens, or night watchmen of churches in the time that churches never locked their doors. These "churchwardens" couldn't be expected to go all night without a smoke, so they had pipes that were made with exceptionally long stems so the smoke and the pipe wouldn't be in their line of sight as they kept watch. Also made popular by the Lord of the Rings trilogy, Churchwardens have become highly desirable in recent years.




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