Is glass made in China OK?

09 Apr.,2024

 

By Smoke Cartel Crew on May 31, 2016

American vs. Chinese Made Glass

American made bongs or Chinese? You can find many arguments on the Internet discussing the difference between American made and Chinese made glass. However, contrary to what you may read, the real difference between the two is not in the quality of the glass creation, but the quality of the glass.

Quite the opposite to an American made glass blowing studio, Chinese glassblowing studios make producing glass products as cheap of an affair as possible. This often leads to lower quality supplies, thinly blown glass, and with less consideration to structure and durability.  

A Chinese glass pipe and an American pipe could look exactly the same, however the internal chamber and percolators will be significantly more fragile on a Chinese glass pipe.

However, there is an exception to this. When Chinese studios are contracted by American companies to produce glass specifically for their purchase, American companies may negotiate specific standards for thickness and quality on their imports, and pieces often go through multiple revisions to ensure proper thickness and quality. 

American Labor

American glass usually has a noticeably higher price tag on it than imported glass. This is because Chinese manufacturing is subsidized by the Chinese government, which keeps manufacturing labor at a cheap price. Even disregarding subsidies altogether, China’s work force works for a substantially lower rate than Americans.  When you shop American glass, a lot of what you are paying for is the cost of American labor.

However, you are also paying to keep jobs here in America. Since all functional glass is produced by a human, it consists of human care and craftsmanship. There is no machine out there that will just pop a water pipe out. Additionally, supplies and equipment used by glass blowers is not cheap either, not to mention potential hospital bills that can often arise when you’re dealing with torches that reach temperatures upwards of 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit.

That said, by supporting American art and American labor, you are contributing not just to the American workforce but to a lineage of fine and non-traditional art in the veins of American history. 

The Art of Glassblowing

Glassblowing as an art takes an incredibly long time. It takes years just to become a decent glassblower, and it can take decades to become a standout talent. The actual process of melting glass, blowing glass, and annealing it to the kiln also takes a startling amount of time.

Most Chinese glassblowers do not have years of glassblowing experience, and a lot of Chinese workers are factory workers who have turned to glassblowing as a way to support themselves.

In China, glassblowing is not an art, it is a manufacturing job. American glassblowers and consumers consider glass working to be an art because of the intricacies, innovations, and intuitive designs that American glass artists focus on creating. Chinese factories do not innovate, they copy existing designs from images online or samples sent to them by companies. By buying American glass, you are contributing to the continuing efforts of American glassblowers to have their craft seen as an art within the community.


Smoke Cartel & American Glassblowers

The demand for high quality glass products continues to accelerate as the counterculture industry becomes less and less "counter" to "culture". While this future is exciting, it also widens the gap between domestic and foreign glass even further.

To any glass connoisseur, the difference it makes to hold a piece handblown by an artist with lifelong passion and a groundbreaking vision is unparalleled. Our small and passionate team curates glass made in the USA by cultivating personal relationships with the artists who bring it to life.

Brands like Envy Glass, who make each piece to order individually-- meaning that the one you buy was blown for you and you alone. LA Pipes (formerly UPC), based in Riverside, California, is one of our top sellers thanks to their thick tubing, ergonomic designs, and affordable pricing.

You’ll find blowers from Asheville, North Carolina to Austin, Texas to Denver, Colorado to Los Angeles.

Smoke Cartel recognizes that each glass artist has something incredible to add to the industry in his or her body of work, and we are working hard to help preserve and distribute an important part in US art history.

Keep checking on smokecartel.com for new heady pieces, new unbranded pipes, and new glassblowers, all made right here in the United States of America!

When home cooks bake an apple pie, many of them use Pyrex glass measuring cups – products promoted as, well, “American as apple pie.” But despite prominent claims that certain of their measuring cups were “proudly made in the USA,” the FTC says that between May 2021 and March 2022, some consumers shopping on Amazon actually received products made in China.

Illinois-based Instant Brands manufactures and sells housewares under the Pyrex brand name, including glass measuring cups and other glass cooking and baking accessories. Touting Pyrex’s “made in the USA heritage,” Instant Brands advertised Pyrex products as “Made in USA,” “Proudly Made in USA” and “1 of 10 products surprisingly still made in America.”

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One consequence of the COVID pandemic was a resurgence in home baking and an accompanying increase in demand for Pyrex measuring cups. On Amazon, Instant Brands marketed two SKUs of its glass cups – a three-piece set and a four-piece set – with the prominent representation that they were “Made in USA.” However, between May 2021 and March 2022, Instant Brands shifted production of certain measuring cups advertised as U.S.-made from the United States to China. Those Chinese-origin measuring cups were marked and packaged with the statement “Made in China.”

All told, Instant Brands fulfilled more than 110,000 Amazon orders for Made in USA measuring cups with Chinese-origin products. The company did that despite receiving numerous complaints from consumers who had ordered American-made measuring cups and were unhappy about receiving Chinese-made merchandise instead. What’s more, alleges the FTC, “[T]hroughout this time, despite importing and selling measuring cups from China, Instant Brands continued to publish and disseminate general advertising materials stating or implying that all Pyrex products were of U.S. origin.”

The complaint alleges that in advertising Pyrex three- and four-piece measuring cup sets, Instant Brand falsely represented they were all or virtually all made in the United States. To settle the case, the company will pay a $129,416 monetary judgment and will be bound by injunctive provisions prohibiting it from making Made in USA claims unless the final assembly or processing of the product occurs in the United States, all significant processing occurs here, and all or virtually all ingredients or components are made and sourced here. If Instant Brands wants to make a qualified claim, the proposed order requires a clear and conspicuous qualification immediately adjacent to the representation that must accurately convey the extent to which the product contains foreign parts, ingredients, or processing. What if the company wants to say a product is assembled in the U.S.? Then the product must be last substantially transformed in the United States, the principal assembly must take place in the U.S., and the U.S. assembly operations must be substantial.

Once the proposed settlement appears in the Federal Register, the FTC will receive public comments for 30 days.

The lesson of the Pyrex case is to make sure your manufacturing processes measure up to your Made in USA promises. If there are changes to your supply chain – even temporary ones – update your ads to avoid deception. It’s a recipe for consumer dissatisfaction and possible law enforcement to disseminate half-baked Made in USA claims.
 

Is glass made in China OK?

FTC reminds company that makes Pyrex glassware to be transparent about Made in USA claims