At the beginning of the year, an accessories designer named Brett Heyman sold weed, legally, for the first time in New York City.

Heyman is the creative director of Edie Parker, a handbag line she founded in 2010. She added home accessories in 2016, then smoking accessories in 2019, followed by actual things to smoke.

The brand is colorful and cheeky and inspired by midcentury design. The smoking collection includes tabletop lighters that resemble decorative gelatin cakes ($195 to $275), rolling papers covered in illustrations of flowers, strawberries and more ($8) and color-blocked grinders that can pass as mod paperweights ($30 to $70).

Heyman’s seasoned pitch is this: “No one makes cannabis accessories that are treated like bar accessories, that feel considered and playful and meant to be shown off. Everything is hidden in the back of a drawer.” (She acknowledged that other brands exist with similar goals, such as Seth Rogen’s Houseplant.)

It’s all very cute, which was a challenge when it came to designing the packaging for the cannabis products, which cannot be too cute. Generally, in states where cannabis has been legalized, products must appear “unappealing to children,” said Heyman, 43. “But I don’t think stripes are that appealing to children.” State agencies have largely approved of her colorful packaging; New Jersey nixed the stripes.

The disposable vape pens in her line, Flower by Edie Parker, are candy-colored.

“Sometimes it really does come down to the packaging,” said Jade Jones, a “budtender” at the Travel Agency in Union Square, one of Manhattan’s legal dispensaries. Jones compared Flower’s vape to “a cannabis toy, with the mirror.”

“Weed doesn’t have to be ugly,” said Brandon Blackwood, another accessories designer.

But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. Heyman lives with her husband and three children on the Upper East Side, in an apartment that erupts with color, starting with the foyer, where several of Andy Warhol’s “Flowers” prints are hung on black walls.

That morning, Heyman was recounting something her eighth grader, Edie (the brand was named after her), told her the night before.

“Her friends were having a debate,” Heyman said, sitting in a vintage chair with tiger-striped cushions. Nearby, a hot-pink Yves Klein coffee table was topped with art books and a yellow glass bong. “Her friends were all saying that alcohol is so much better for you than cannabis.”

“I don’t think it’s my place to educate her friends,” Heyman continued. But she told her daughter, “This just speaks to the stigma around cannabis.”

In the years before she founded Edie Parker, Heyman worked as a fashion publicist for Gucci and Dolce & Gabbana.

“Talking about fashion is so natural and easy, but with cannabis, I felt like I had to go to college — it’s an agricultural product,” said Heyman, who is now able to explain the complexities of marijuana regulation and tax law, along with why the former “Real Housewives of New York” cast was superior to the current one and throw in a joke or two, probably without taking a breath.

Heyman is part of a wave of cannabis entrepreneurs living in a new era of legal pot, in which states are expunging marijuana-related charges and enacting (or stumbling around enacting) “social equity” measures to atone for years of racially disparate policing. Many private companies benefiting from this era make efforts to redress the injustice, too, with charitable donations.

“Everybody is aware of the struggles that came before and the people whose lives had been disproportionately affected by this totally ridiculous war on drugs,” Heyman said.

At Edie Parker, “we talk about it, but we don’t lead with it,” said Heyman, who views her role more as helping to normalize cannabis use through “unserious” marketing. “I always try to keep everything fairly light.”

Once being able to sell her products in New York, Heyman set out to see her products in Manhattan dispensaries — the result of almost three years of work. In line at the Travel Agency, she smiled. “I don’t want to be a dork, but will you take a picture?” she asked her publicist.

After stuffing the dispensary bags into her Hermès tote, Heyman met a friend, Paul Arnhold, for lunch. The Heymans have a home in Connecticut near Arnhold, a glass artist, and his husband, Wes Gordon, the creative director of Caroline Herrera. Edie Parker has also collaborated with Arnhold on handblown glass bongs, including the one on her coffee table. They are priced at $795.

“I’ve seen clients use them as vases,” Arnhold said.

Neither has tried smoking out of their bongs. Arnhold doesn’t use cannabis. “Some people can smoke, and they get inspired and they get more funny and they contribute more,” he said. “It doesn’t do that for me.”

After lunch, Heyman delivered some of her dispensary purchases to Blackwood’s studio. They have similar interests; he has encased joints in the plexiglass heels of sandals and released bags on 4/20 embroidered with hemp leafs. He owns several Edie Parker pieces, including a pipe shaped like grapes.

“It’s a part of self-care,” said Blackwood, whose clutches have been carried by Jennifer Lopez, Reese Witherspoon and Oprah.

Walking out of the studio, Heyman was drawn toward a tourist shop next door, on Canal Street. Inside, she found a T-shirt that was almost cosmically well-suited to the day’s events: an “I (HEART) NY” tee, except the heart had been replaced by a weed leaf.

She bought the shirt.