Traditional Shisha Pipes | Egyptian & Turkish Hookahs

What are Traditional Shisha Pipes?

Traditional shisha pipes are the handmade hookahs built in the regions where shisha culture first took shape — Egypt, Turkey, and Syria. They're called "traditional" to separate them from the machine-made modern pipes you'll see from German and Russian makers.

Every traditional pipe is hand-welded. The stems are usually stainless steel wrapped in worked brass or copper, and the bases are hand-blown glass. Because they're built by artisans using the same tools and techniques their families have used for generations, every pipe carries small variations — slight weld marks, subtle engraving differences, little glass irregularities. Those aren't defects. They're what handmade looks like.

Egyptian (shisha), Turkish (nargile), and Syrian (argile) pipes share the same basic construction but differ in style. Egyptian pipes tend to be weightier and more utilitarian. Turkish pipes often feature more ornate brasswork and decorative engraving. Syrian pipes sit between the two.

They all share one functional character: a tighter draw than modern pipes, richer flavour, almost always a single hose. Pair them with traditional tobaccos like Al Fakher, Nakhla, Mazaya, or Adalya. If you want heritage and flavour over raw cloud output, this is the category.
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  • Top Mark Sokar 22/1 Shisha Pipe
    Regular price
    $65.77 USD
    Sale price
    $65.77 USD
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    Top Mark Sokar 22/1 Shisha Pipe

  • Basha Buzz Jaguar Shisha Pipe
    Regular price
    $83.87 USD
    Sale price
    $83.87 USD
    Regular price
    $98.68 USD
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    Basha Buzz Jaguar Shisha Pipe

  • Basha Buzz Draco Shisha Pipe
    Regular price
    $98.68 USD
    Sale price
    $98.68 USD
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    Basha Buzz Draco Shisha Pipe

  • Basha Buzz Mustang Shisha Pipe
    Regular price
    $98.68 USD
    Sale price
    $98.68 USD
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    Basha Buzz Mustang Shisha Pipe

  • Khalil Mamoon Shareef Silver 7704 79cm Hookah
    Regular price
    $178.96 USD
    Sale price
    $178.96 USD
    Regular price
    $210.54 USD
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    Khalil Mamoon Shareef Silver 7704 79cm Hookah

  • Khalil Mamoon Skinny Gold 7705 90cm Hookah
    Regular price
    $190.80 USD
    Sale price
    $190.80 USD
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    Khalil Mamoon Skinny Gold 7705 90cm Hookah

  • Khalil Mamoon Borg 4351 80cm Hookah
    Regular price
    $197.38 USD
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    $197.38 USD
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    Khalil Mamoon Borg 4351 80cm Hookah

  • Khalil Mamoon Sharqawi 2 Copper 7701 100cm Hookah
    Regular price
    $263.19 USD
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    $263.19 USD
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    Khalil Mamoon Sharqawi 2 Copper 7701 100cm Hookah

  • Khalil Mamoon Ice Shareef Black 7702 90cm Hookah
    Regular price
    $296.10 USD
    Sale price
    $296.10 USD
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    Khalil Mamoon Ice Shareef Black 7702 90cm Hookah

Frequently asked

Questions about Traditional Shisha Pipes | Egyptian & Turkish Hookahs

What's the difference between traditional and modern shisha pipes?
Traditional pipes are handmade in Egypt, Turkey, or Syria using brass and stainless steel — hand-welded, tighter draw, flavour-forward, almost always single hose. Modern pipes are machine-made in Germany or Russia using V2A stainless steel — threaded connections, open draw, bigger clouds, often multi-hose. Different philosophies: traditional prioritises flavour and heritage, modern prioritises precision and output.
Are traditional pipes harder to use than modern ones?
No — actually slightly easier in some ways. There are fewer parts, fewer moving pieces to seal, and no threaded connections that need tightening. You assemble it by pushing parts together through rubber grommets. The draw is tighter, so the pull feels firmer, but that's a character difference, not a difficulty one.
What's the difference between Egyptian and Turkish pipes?
Mostly style. Egyptian pipes (like Khalil Mamoon) lean utilitarian — heavier stems, simpler engravings, built for daily use in Middle Eastern lounges. Turkish nargile pipes lean decorative — more ornate brasswork, detailed engraving, often coloured or patterned glass bases. Functionally they smoke the same way. Pick the look you want.
Can I use modern bowls and hoses on a traditional pipe?
Yes. The bowl port is a standard grommet-fit size, so modern phunnels and traditional clay bowls both work. Any silicone hose fits the hose port. A lot of enthusiasts keep the original hose for looks and swap to a silicone hose for daily use — both are fine.
What should I look for when buying a traditional pipe?
Solid welds (no pinholes), a tight stem-to-base seal via the grommet, clean bore inside the stem, and a proper brand stamp if it's from a named maker. Small aesthetic imperfections are fine and expected. Big functional problems — loose joins, leaky welds, rough internal metal — aren't. Handmade means varied, not broken.
How do I know a traditional pipe is genuine?
Branded pipes carry the maker's stamp on the stem, tray, or bowl — Khalil Mamoon is the most recognisable. Counterfeit or grey-market pipes often look cleaner than the real thing (machine-made perfectly) and come in plain packaging. Buy from authorised retailers and you'll get the real thing, imported through legitimate channels.