Functional glass art pendant – wearable piece with dichroic shimmer
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      Glass Pendants – Wearable Flame-Worked Art

      Discover the world of flame-worked glass pendants—wearable pieces that merge heady art with jewelry design. Whether you’re looking for colorful creatures, opal inlays, or UV-reactive pieces, our glass pendant collection features work from top functional glass artists.

      Each pendant is hand-crafted using durable borosilicate glass and often incorporates dichroic shimmer, sculptural textures, and signature millie work. These pieces are made to be collected, gifted, or worn every day.

      🧿 Looking for more flame-crafted art? Check out:


      Frequently Asked Questions – Glass Pendants

      What makes a glass pendant “heady”?

      Heady glass pendants feature artistic details like sculpting, fume work, color layering, or millie chips, making them unique or limited edition pieces.

      Are these pendants wearable?

      Yes! Each pendant comes with a loop bail or hole for cord/chain compatibility. They’re wearable daily or for display purposes.

      Do your pendants glow under UV light?

      Many pendants include UV-reactive colors or accents that glow under blacklight. Product listings specify if the pendant is UV-reactive.

      Are these made by specific artists?

      Absolutely. We feature work from respected independent glass artists known for wearable functional art. Each piece includes artist details when available.

      35 products

      Frequently Asked Questions about Glass Pendants – Functional Art, Sculpted Jewelry & Flame-Worked Collectibles

      A glass pendant is a small piece of artist-blown borosilicate designed to be worn on a chain, leather cord, or hemp strand, sometimes with an additional functional element. In heady glass culture, pendants are wearable extensions of the same artists who produce rigs, tubes, and slides, and they let collectors carry an artist's work outside the home. Pendants range from purely decorative sculptural forms, including fumed orbs, sculpted animals, lampwork florals, and millefiori discs, to functional mini-pipes that can actually be smoked from. Sizes typically run from quarter-sized accent pieces to four-inch statement pieces. Featured artists at Angies Boutique include Sweeney Glass, D-Wreck, Emperial Glass, Sakibomb Glass, and Coyle Condenser, each working in a distinct visual language. Pendants serve three roles at once: an artist signature you can wear daily, a portable showcase for the same fume, color, and sculpting techniques used on full-size rigs, and a relatively accessible price point that lets collectors own a piece by an artist whose larger work runs into the thousands. Angies Boutique in Los Angeles, open since 1990, hand-selects each pendant in the collection.
      Glass pendants split into three functional categories. Pure-jewelry pendants are sculpted entirely for visual effect, with no internal airpath, and they exist solely as wearable art. Smokable pendants are working mini-pipes with a carved bowl, an airpath running through the body, and a carb hole or mouthpiece, allowing the wearer to smoke directly from the pendant. Hybrid pendants combine a sculptural exterior with a removable or hidden functional element, such as a tiny stash chamber, a screw-on bowl, or a magnetic connection point. Each listing at Angies Boutique specifies which category the pendant belongs to. Sweeney Glass and D-Wreck both produce pieces in all three categories. Emperial Glass and Sakibomb Glass focus more heavily on sculptural and hybrid pieces. Coyle Condenser works primarily in functional sculpted forms. If you intend to actually smoke from the pendant, confirm the bowl size, the airpath diameter, and whether the piece comes with a screen, since miniature bowls clog quickly without one. If you intend to wear the pendant purely as jewelry, any of the categories work.
      Angies Boutique stocks pendants from five recognized heady-glass pendant artists. Sweeney Glass is known for clean lampwork forms, technical fume work, and a recurring use of dichroic accents that flash color under direct light. D-Wreck produces sculpted character pendants and abstract organic forms, often combining color rod work with sand-carved detail. Emperial Glass focuses on millefiori discs, complex murrine, and pattern-driven pendants that read like miniature stained-glass panels. Sakibomb Glass is recognized for sculpted figural pendants, animal forms, and pop-culture-inspired pieces that combine humor with precise lampwork. Coyle Condenser, also known for full-size condenser coils and recyclers, produces functional pendant pipes that translate their engineering aesthetic into wearable form. Each artist signs their pendants, and signatures are photographed in the listing so collectors can verify authenticity. Pricing across the five artists ranges from roughly $80 for entry pendants to $800-plus for large sculptural or fully functional pieces. Angies Boutique in Los Angeles, open since 1990, has direct relationships with each artist's distribution, so every pendant in the collection comes with documented provenance.
      Sweeney Glass and D-Wreck both produce high-end heady pendants, but their aesthetics are distinct. Sweeney Glass works in a clean, technical style with an emphasis on flawless lampwork, symmetrical forms, fume layering, and dichroic flash. A typical Sweeney pendant reads as polished, geometric, and refined, with color shifts that change as the pendant moves under light. The work appeals to collectors who value precision and subtle optical effects. D-Wreck works in a more sculptural, character-driven style, with figural forms, abstract organic shapes, and frequent use of sand-carved surface detail. A typical D-Wreck pendant reads as expressive, narrative, and visually busy, with personality that stands out from across a room. The work appeals to collectors who value artistic voice and unique silhouettes. Neither artist is better than the other, and many serious collectors own pieces by both. If you want a pendant that complements daily wear and rewards close inspection, Sweeney is the typical choice. If you want a pendant that functions as a conversation piece and a signature look, D-Wreck is the typical choice. Angies Boutique stocks current work from both artists.
      Glass pendants are worn on chains, leather cords, hemp strands, or beaded necklaces, and the choice depends on pendant weight, attachment point, and aesthetic. Lightweight pendants under 30 grams work well on fine sterling silver or gold chains, which let the pendant move freely without pulling. Mid-weight pendants from 30 to 80 grams need substantial cord or thick chain, typically braided leather, waxed hemp, or heavy curb-link chain. Heavy pendants over 80 grams should be worn on adjustable leather cord or paracord with a knot below the pendant to keep it stable. The attachment point on the pendant matters as much as cord choice. Most artist pendants include either a glass loop blown into the top of the piece or a glass-encased metal bail, and the diameter of that loop determines maximum cord thickness. Angies Boutique lists the bail diameter on each pendant so you can pair it with a compatible chain or cord. Cord and chains are sold separately, since collectors typically own multiple cords and rotate them depending on the pendant and the occasion. Replacement cords are stocked in the storage containers and accessories collection.
      Glass pendant pricing is driven by artist reputation, piece size, technique complexity, and material content. An entry-level pendant from a recognized artist starts around $80 to $150 and covers small, single-technique pieces such as a fumed orb or a simple sculpted form. Mid-tier pendants from $150 to $400 reflect more time in the flame, multiple techniques layered into one piece, and signed work from established artists like Sweeney Glass, D-Wreck, or Sakibomb Glass. High-end pendants from $400 to $800-plus cover large sculptural pieces, fully functional pendant pipes, millefiori work from Emperial Glass, complex Coyle Condenser engineering pieces, and one-of-one drops with extensive color rod or precious-metal fume content. Material also drives price, since silver fume, gold fume, dichroic glass, and certain color rods are significantly more expensive than standard borosilicate. Provenance affects resale, with signed and photographed pendants holding value far better than unsigned work. Angies Boutique in Los Angeles, open since 1990, lists each pendant with the artist signature, weight, dimensions, and material details so collectors understand exactly what they are paying for.
      Care for a glass pendant the way you would care for fine glass jewelry. Remove the pendant before showering, swimming, sleeping, or exercising, since soap residue dulls the surface, chlorine can interact with applied color, and hard impacts crack borosilicate. Store the pendant in a soft-lined box or pouch, never tangled with metal jewelry that can scratch the glass. Clean the pendant with warm water and a drop of mild dish soap, applied with a soft cloth or fingertips, then rinse and air-dry on a lint-free towel. For functional pendant pipes that have been smoked from, use 91 percent isopropyl alcohol on a cotton swab to clean the bowl and airpath, then rinse thoroughly with warm water and dry completely before wearing again. Avoid acetone on any pendant with applied color, fume, or sand-carved fills. Inspect the bail or glass loop regularly for stress cracks, since the cord-attachment point bears the full weight of the pendant during wear. Replace worn cords before the pendant drops. Angies Boutique stocks replacement cords, pouches, and cleaning supplies in the cleaning supplies collection.
      The best pendant gift for a heady-glass collector is a signed piece from a recognized artist whose larger work the recipient already collects or admires. If the recipient owns a Mothership rig, a Liberty 503 slide, or any specific artist's work, look for a pendant from that artist or from an artist working in a similar visual lineage. If you do not know the recipient's existing collection, choose a mid-tier signed piece from Sweeney Glass, D-Wreck, Emperial Glass, or Sakibomb Glass in the $150 to $300 range, which covers most collectors' tastes without being too small or too overwhelming. Functional pendant pipes are popular gifts for active dabbers and smokers, while purely sculptural pendants appeal to collectors who already own a full-size rig setup. Include a quality cord or chain sized to the pendant's bail, and a soft-lined pouch for storage. Pair the pendant with a gift card so the recipient can choose accessories. Angies Boutique in Los Angeles, open since 1990, gift-wraps pendants with the artist signature card included and ships nationwide, and walk-ins can inspect pieces in person before purchase.