Handcrafted in Boardman, Oregon

This pendant
was a pipe.

SecondFire transforms unsold marijuana pipes into one-of-a-kind recovery pendants through borosilicate glass and open flame. Every piece carries a story of transformation. 25% supports youth housing in the Tri-Cities.

Recycled Glass  •  Torch-Worked by Hand  •  Recovery with Purpose
The Origin

Old glass gets a second life. So do the people it supports.

Every SecondFire pendant starts as an unsold pipe, sitting in a box, going nowhere. Ryan Hendrickson takes that glass to his torch, melts it down, and reshapes it into something you can wear close to your heart.

The material transformation is real. Borosilicate glass heated to over 1,500 degrees, reformed under flame, cooled into a pendant that catches light differently than anything mass-produced ever could. No two pieces are alike because no two journeys are alike.

This isn't symbolic. This is literal. The thing that was associated with one chapter becomes the emblem of the next.

The Craft

From flame to form

01

Source

Unsold boro glass pipes are collected, giving dead inventory a second purpose instead of a landfill.

02

Transform

Each pipe is torch-worked by hand, melted and reshaped into a unique pendant. The colors and patterns emerge organically from the original glass.

03

Give Back

25% of every sale goes directly to Snipes H3 in Kennewick, WA, funding housing and mentorship for young adults rebuilding their lives.

The Partnership

Snipes H3: giving young adults a place to stand

Snipes H3 is a Kennewick-based nonprofit providing housing, mentorship, and life-skills training for young adults ages 18 to 24 facing homelessness. Since 2018, they've served nearly 300 residents with structured programming that combines stable housing with education and community service.

25%
of every sale
Goes directly to Snipes H3 in the Tri-Cities, WA. Not a marketing pledge. A structural revenue split built into the business from day one.

Every piece of glass
remembers the fire.

SecondFire exists because transformation is not a metaphor. It's a process. Heat, patience, new form. That's true for glass, and it's true for people.