Pretty Bongs, Bubblers & Pipes That Belong on Display: Burning Love’s Tea Party Collection
The era of hiding your bong in a sock drawer is over. Burning Love's newest collection is built to live on your bar cart.
May 15, 2026
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PHOTO COURTESY OF BURNING LOVE
The era of hiding your bong in a sock drawer is over. Burning Love's newest collection is built to live on your bar cart.
May 15, 2026
Pretty bongs are having a moment. And Burning Love’s new Tea Party Collection is exactly the kind of release that explains why.
Smoking accessories used to live in shame closets. They were ugly on purpose. The unspoken rule was that anything weed-related had to look industrial, dorm-room, or just boring. Whatever piece you owned, you hid it before people came over.
That whole posture has flipped. Cannabis culture has moved into the same lifestyle space as natural wine, vintage glassware, and home decor. Your bong is now allowed to be beautiful. It’s allowed to match your apartment. It’s allowed to sit next to your matcha bowl and your candles without anyone raising an eyebrow.
Burning Love has been one of the brands actually pushing this shift forward. They’re busy building pretty bongs and pretty pipes that women want on display rather than tucked away. Their newest drop, the Tea Party Collection, takes that whole ethos and pours it into a dainty teapot.

A dreamy statement piece for tea party lovers, the Teapot Bong by Burning Love pairs whimsical floral details with smooth function in an adorable jade pink design.
Flashback ten years ago. The design world wasn’t making pretty bongs, and the cannabis world wasn’t making them pretty enough. That’s where Burning Love stepped up.
Formerly A Shop of Things, this female-owned Nashville lifestyle brand sold smoking accessories and kept running into the same problem. Shopify’s payment processors don’t play well with cannabis product lines. So they spun off a dedicated space: Burning Love, a 420-friendly home for the kind of pretty bongs and accessories the founders wanted to own themselves.
The brand is owned and operated by women (with one male employee on the team—you go, Glen Coco). And the goal was simple. Smoking accessories were ugly. Pieces were designed to be hidden, not displayed. There was a real gap in the market for cannabis hardware that looked like it belonged on a coffee table.
The Burning Love philosophy? Everything they make is meant to be fashionable, functional, fun, and affordable. The mantra: don’t hide your bong, put it on a pedestal. Pretty bongs for women and anyone who wants to display their pieces, not stash them.

PHOTO COURTESY OF BURNING LOVE
Every drop is conceptualized, developed, and photographed in-house with serious attention to theme and motif. Past collections have included Circus Collection, Farmer’s Market, Halloween, Catholic Guilt, Girl Dinner, and Bar Cart. The Tea Party Collection is the latest installment, and like every drop before it, the pieces are designed to complement each other for a cohesive aesthetic.
But here’s where Burning Love really separates itself. The brand donates 1% of monthly sales to the Last Prisoner Project, a nonprofit working toward cannabis criminal justice reform. They also support the Floret Coalition, and total giving has crossed $100,000 to date. Their stance is consistent: cannabis legalization doesn’t mean much if the people doing time for cannabis offenses are still behind bars.
Community engagement runs the same way. Burning Love responds to customers quickly, takes product requests seriously, and runs a delightfully unhinged section of the site called the Kitty Clink. Customers email in photos of pets (or husbands) who’ve committed punishable offenses, like chewing a grinder cap or breaking a bong. The “convicted” get posted to jail, and the customer gets a coupon code. Charges are eventually dropped. Pets and husbands are rehabilitated and released back into society.
It’s silly, it’s warm, and it’s exactly the kind of brand personality that’s missing from most cannabis accessory shops. From feminine bongs and girly bongs to grinders, lighter wraps, and battery charms, Burning Love is bringing aesthetics to the weed world.

PHOTO COURTESY OF BURNING LOVE
The Tea Party Collection is exactly what it sounds like. Vintage tea service, reimagined as functional smoking hardware. Roses, gold trim, pastel ceramics, pedestals. These are pretty bongs for sale that look more like grandma’s china cabinet than anything you’d expect to pack a bowl into.
Meet the hero of the collection. A glossy pink glass teapot bong with pastel rose details and tiny gold feet. The spout doubles as the mouthpiece. The bowl is built into the lid and styled like a miniature teacup. Even the gold trim around the rim and handle gives it a real porcelain “High Tea” moment. As far as pretty girly bongs that genuinely commit to a theme, the Teapot Bong is the centerpiece.
If the teapot is the main event, the teacup bubbler is its sidekick. Glossy white borosilicate glass, scattered pink rose decals, and gold trim on the rim and handle. The clear glass downstem and bowl sit off to the side, with a slender, angled mouthpiece rising from the top. Pair it with the teapot bong on a shelf or bar cart, and you’ve got the full set. Hosting a session feels like a tea ceremony when both pieces are out together. Pretty bubblers come and go, but the teacup styling here is timeless.
At first glance, it looks like a tiny petit four pastry. But don’t be fooled. She’s a pastel-pink hand pipe with white “frosting” piped along the edges, and a bright red strawberry punched in the center. The bowl is integrated into the top, with a small carb hole on the side. It’s the smallest piece in the collection, and probably the most charming. Someone in the room is bound to ask if it’s real. That’s the whole point.
The outlier in the collection. The Cameo Bong is a cobalt blue glass bong with floral artwork wrapping around a black-and-white cameo medallion in the center of the chamber. It’s the most “antique heirloom” piece in the drop. While the teapot and teacup lean playful and pastel, the Cameo Bong leans Victorian. This one earns its spot in any design-forward, vintage-leaning sesh space.

PHOTO COURTESY OF BURNING LOVE
Burning Love operates on a drop model. A few things are worth knowing before you build out a cart:
The collections are themed, and they sell out. Past drops like Girl Dinner, Bar Cart, Catholic Guilt, and Halloween came and went with limited restocks. Pieces from older collections are usually impossible to find once they’re gone. If something from the Tea Party Collection catches your eye, grab it now.
The pieces are designed to complement each other within a drop. Buy the Teapot Bong and the Teacup Bubbler together, and they read as a set. Add the Petit Four Pipe, and you’ve got the full tea service. This is part of what makes Burning Love’s catalog feel collectible rather than transactional. The pretty bongs in a single drop are meant to be displayed together.
The product range goes well beyond bongs. Across the Burning Love shop, you’ll find feminine bongs, girly bongs, grinders, lighter wraps, vape battery charms, ashtrays, rolling trays, and accessories that round out a full setup. The Tea Party Collection is the latest drop, but the broader catalog is worth browsing if you’re building out a consistent aesthetic.

PHOTO COURTESY OF BURNING LOVE
The shift toward pretty bongs and pretty pipes is part of a larger cultural move. The pieces that earn the “pretty” label tend to share a few things: thoughtful materials (borosilicate glass, hand-blown, gold detailing), clear design themes (vintage, dessert-inspired, floral, fashion-forward), and small touches that make them display-worthy. The goal is a piece you’d put on a shelf, not in a drawer.
A teapot bong is a water pipe shaped like a vintage teapot. It’s crafted from ceramic with decorative details like raised florals, gold trim, and a spout mouthpiece. Burning Love’s Teapot Bong is one of the best examples, complete with a teacup-styled bowl built into the lid.
Both use water filtration, but bubblers are smaller, handheld, and designed for personal use. Bongs are typically larger, stand on a base, and produce bigger hits thanks to longer chambers. A teacup bubbler like the one in this collection sits on the smaller end of the spectrum, while the teapot bong is built more like a traditional water pipe.
Both. The aesthetic is deliberate, but every piece is built as a fully functional water pipe or hand pipe. The teapot bong’s spout works as a real mouthpiece, the teacup bubbler’s downstem and bowl operate exactly like any other glass piece, and the Cameo Bong is hand-blown glass with all the construction you’d expect from a standard water pipe. They’re collectible without being decorative-only.
Yes, especially for people in your life who already enjoy cannabis but have been smoking out of the same generic glass piece since college. Pretty bongs and pretty pipes in the Burning Love catalog are giftable for birthdays, housewarmings, holidays, or any moment where you want to upgrade someone’s setup with something they’d genuinely display.
Standard glass and ceramic cleaning practices apply: warm water, isopropyl alcohol (91% works best), and coarse salt for the harder-to-reach buildup. For borosilicate glass pieces, avoid harsh abrasives that could scratch the glaze. Burning Love sells their own Bong Cleaning Kit, which includes the right tools for keeping pieces looking display-ready. It’s important to note that alcohol should not be used on the outside of Burning Love’s products to preserve the finish on the pieces.

PHOTO COURTESY OF BURNING LOVE
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