What was your first pipe?

NanoGadget

Well-Known Member
My first was a little screw together metal pipe. Which was quickly replaced with a small space fume glass pipe. Now I'm a glass blower and make all kinds of pipes, but rarely can afford to get any new ones from other glass blowers for the collection lol.
oddly enough my first piece of glass was a fumed pipe made by Bob Snodgrass. paid for it with a couple ounces of Northern Lights. that was the only glass I owned until about 5 years ago or so.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
My first real pipe was a late 70s Proto Pipe that I inherited from a cousin. It was stolen at a party in 93 or 94. Finally decided to get a new one now that Phil Jergenson and his brother are running the company again. I love I every bit as much as I did 30 years ago.
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I stole one of those from a friends uncle when I was like 15-16. Karma got me though. It had weed in the chamber and I lost it as I was running away from the Principle of my high school.

And before that some friends borrowed it, and they managed to get the resin catcher out and they smoked all my resin.

My first pipe was one we found in my friends dads room. It was brass and had a giant bowl.
 

NanoGadget

Well-Known Member
I stole one of those from a friends uncle when I was like 15-16. Karma got me though. It had weed in the chamber and I lost it as I was running away from the Principle of my high school.

And before that some friends borrowed it, and they managed to get the resin catcher out and they smoked all my resin.

My first pipe was one we found in my friends dads room. It was brass and had a giant bowl.
First pot I smoked was out of my buddy's step-dad's dresser. he grew mid grade outdoor and all that was left in the bag was shake. tasted like ass and was harsh, but it got me really high.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
First pot I smoked was out of my buddy's step-dad's dresser. he grew mid grade outdoor and all that was left in the bag was shake. tasted like ass and was harsh, but it got me really high.
First weed I smoked was chronic and I fell in love. Then a buddy's cousins grew some indoor chronic, and sold me a bag of shake for $1. We went back the next day and bought a couple more bags. Had to be a few ounces. We smoked it all summer in my spa at night. Then I was addicted.
 

PJ Diaz

Well-Known Member
My first pipe was a screw together type made of brass lamp parts. Rocked that shit for years. Later in my 20's I learned to carve stone pipes. I started with soapstone, then serpentine, and alabaster. Eventually I made them from Minnesota Pipestone. They were pretty nice and I tried selling them at Grateful Dead shows and stuff a bit, but it was right when glass pipes were the new thing, and I couldn't compete with those prices for my hand carved works, so put the project aside. A few years ago, I decided to carve myself a pipe again, and ordered some pipestone from Ebay. Here's a few pics. You can see how it progressed from raw stone to a nice hand polished piece.

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Killaki

Well-Known Member
My first pipe was a screw together type made of brass lamp parts. Rocked that shit for years. Later in my 20's I learned to carve stone pipes. I started with soapstone, then serpentine, and alabaster. Eventually I made them from Minnesota Pipestone. They were pretty nice and I tried selling them at Grateful Dead shows and stuff a bit, but it was right when glass pipes were the new thing, and I couldn't compete with those prices for my hand carved works, so put the project aside. A few years ago, I decided to carve myself a pipe again, and ordered some pipestone from Ebay. Here's a few pics. You can see how it progressed from raw stone to a nice hand polished piece.

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That's bad ass. I remember an old timer when I started smoking 20+ years ago telling me all the pipes in this area used to be wood or stone. Crazy to see how it turned out, amazing work! From the sounds of it you're probably a pretty cool old timer :)
 

HydroKid239

Well-Known Member
Oh jeez :lol:
First pipe was a metal harmonica that my Godfather gave me as a child. Soon as I turned 14 it was like the idea was there the whole time.. came in pretty handy.. but was too paranoid to keep it on me. The stench was unmaskable.. well at least I didn’t know how to prevent, nor get rid of the smell. No sanitizer around at that time. So I kept it across the street in a tree.. it lasted me a week til it rained.. it rusted up & I wasn’t smoking no rust. After that it was whatever piece of fruit happened to be in the bowl that day. Those were pretty tasty afterward & disposable. Less stench to drag back home.
 

Killaki

Well-Known Member
My first pipe was a metal pipe screw together pipe made from pieces I found in my aunt's drawer. It was pieces from about 5 different pipes all different colors. I had that for a couple years until I scored a small glass piece.
Unfortunately shortly after someone I knew broke into my house and stole my stash, pipe and a bunch of other shit. My parents were pissed. Back to the Franken-pipe for a few more weeks till I got more glass.
 

NanoGadget

Well-Known Member
My first pipe was a screw together type made of brass lamp parts. Rocked that shit for years. Later in my 20's I learned to carve stone pipes. I started with soapstone, then serpentine, and alabaster. Eventually I made them from Minnesota Pipestone. They were pretty nice and I tried selling them at Grateful Dead shows and stuff a bit, but it was right when glass pipes were the new thing, and I couldn't compete with those prices for my hand carved works, so put the project aside. A few years ago, I decided to carve myself a pipe again, and ordered some pipestone from Ebay. Here's a few pics. You can see how it progressed from raw stone to a nice hand polished piece.

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beautiful! I've always kind of wanted to try carving soft stone.. a cool pipe might be the perfect reason to give it a shot.
 

PJ Diaz

Well-Known Member
beautiful! I've always kind of wanted to try carving soft stone.. a cool pipe might be the perfect reason to give it a shot.
Start with soapstone, it's much easier to carve than pipestone, but that also means that it breaks easier. Pipestone is pretty solid, and can take some drops, but takes time to work it properly. I really like alabaster too, which is softer than pipestone and harder than soapstone. It comes in different colors, and I really like the translucent orange variety. It doesn't take many complex tools. I use a coping saw to cut the basic shape from the raw stone. Then drill a hole down the shaft, and another down the bowl, and try to make sure they meet perfectly. Once you have the basic shape the holes drilled, I use a pocket knife to carve out the bowl. Then use a rasp to work the stone down to a symmetrical shape that is close to what you want. Once you are done with the rasp, use a half-round file to smooth out the lines a bit more. Finally, use three grades of wet/dry sandpaper (240, 400, 600 grit is my preference). Once you have it all sanded down to 600 grit, then polish it up with coconut oil, or clear shoe polish to get a nice shine.
 

VincenzioVonHook

Well-Known Member
An apple with a holes bored in it during 9th grade lunch break in the good old year of 98. I graduated to a Gatorade bong shortly after and never looked back.

I remember that day vividly. We found out my mates dad was growing NL In a secret room behind his tool under the house (high set). We went to grab a grinder and the stick welder, opened the tool closet and noticed an intense light through a crack at the back..dude had a whole secret room (18x2.5 foot) built in to one whole side of the house with 8 plants lined up under MH.

Being complete douchebag 14 year olds with zero respect, we took about a pound and a half of cured weed, stuffed it into our school bag and caught a train 40 mins with zero hesitation to my place. The whole carriage smelled like straight skunk and pine. First smoke was the next day at school through an apple. Fucking ace.
 
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lusidghost

Well-Known Member
My first pipe was a screw together type made of brass lamp parts. Rocked that shit for years. Later in my 20's I learned to carve stone pipes. I started with soapstone, then serpentine, and alabaster. Eventually I made them from Minnesota Pipestone. They were pretty nice and I tried selling them at Grateful Dead shows and stuff a bit, but it was right when glass pipes were the new thing, and I couldn't compete with those prices for my hand carved works, so put the project aside. A few years ago, I decided to carve myself a pipe again, and ordered some pipestone from Ebay. Here's a few pics. You can see how it progressed from raw stone to a nice hand polished piece.

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I remember when glass really hit the scene and dudes were smashing them on tables and throwing them around the parking lots trying to make sales. Every once in awhile you'd see one go skipping by.
 

PadawanWarrior

Well-Known Member
An apple with a holes bored in it during 9th grade lunch break in the good old year of 98. I graduated to a Gatorade bong shortly after and never looked back.
I've done the apple thing. I also use to go to the plumbing section and pick different brass parts to make them. And bongs made out of lots of stuff. Gravity bongs with a 2 liter bottle. Then later I found a colored acrylic tube place, so I made all kinds of them. They sold the mouth pieces and bases at head shops. Made straight tubes, multi chamber bongs and all kinds of shit like shotguns.
 
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