Page 38 of 87
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 05:36
by Tead Off
GARCH wrote:Alex wrote:Its gotta be. I watched one exactly the same as that get sold recently. Think it was 200-225ml. I wanted it but held off
Lovely pot
You held off and got another beauty with your preferred volume from Tachi Masaki
Some years ago, when I first posted about Hojo and his teaware, the universal shout from TeaChatter's was 'he's too expensive', 'overpriced', and all sorts of other objections. What happened?
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 08:18
by Alex
Tead Off wrote:GARCH wrote:Alex wrote:Its gotta be. I watched one exactly the same as that get sold recently. Think it was 200-225ml. I wanted it but held off
Lovely pot
You held off and got another beauty with your preferred volume from Tachi Masaki
Some years ago, when I first posted about Hojo and his teaware, the universal shout from TeaChatter's was 'he's too expensive', 'overpriced', and all sorts of other objections. What happened?
Well I've never seen his prices as expensive myself (over other vendors). Probably due to living in the UK LOL.
Still....I try to pace myself a little to stop my wallet from hemorrhaging too much cash
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 09:51
by Chip
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 11:50
by Chip
Attempting to hide the Kyusu-s' source and artisan behind cups on TeaChat is useless ... you guys are too curious and sharp!
Yes, they are Shimizu Ken Kyusu-s from Hojo. I felt I had to try the "magic" clay ... his word in this case. We often poke some fun at Hojo, but I have to believe he is endeavoring to do more with clays than just about anyone else. Smoke and mirrors, fact or fiction?
I am not able to draw concrete ... er clay conclusions yet, but the journey into Sado and Nosaka clays has been interesting and ... ummm ... fun so far.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 12:02
by Chip
I have stated previously (and purposely knowing I would receive these shortly) that I generally choose a kyusu based upon aesthetics, texture, size, shape ... with consideration given to the screen as well. Does it look great and appealing? And will it be functional as well?
I have never chosen a kyusu because it has x, y, or z clay.
For this "experiment," actually there were 4 chosen after careful consideration. I wanted to try a fairly broad range in this realm offered by Hojo.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 12:18
by GARCH
Chip wrote:I have stated previously (and purposely knowing I would receive these shortly) that I generally choose a kyusu based upon aesthetics, texture, size, shape ... with consideration given to the screen as well. Does it look great and appealing? And will it be functional as well?
I have never chosen a kyusu because it has x, y, or z clay.
For this "experiment," actually there were 4 chosen after careful consideration. I wanted to try a fairly broad range in this realm offered by Hojo.
Chip that's one awesome collection of pots!
Looks like you're gonna have be spending quite a bit of time breaking in each of those pots
the duller red looking pot is the one with Namamigaki? Does it feel better in any sense?
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 12:26
by Chip
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 12:32
by Chip
GARCH wrote:Chip that's one awesome collection of pots!
Looks like you're gonna have be spending quite a bit of time breaking in each of those pots
the duller red looking pot is the one with Namamigaki? Does it feel better in any sense?
Yes, the duller reddish orange one is with Namamigaki.
Already been breaking in the three 200 ml. The 100 ml Namamigaki is awaiting its maiden voyage.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 13:23
by Alex
Wow chip. That 200ml red one was the one I was eyeing....I think. Very nice shape on that pot.
What a set to receive in one go. Must have felt like X4 Christmases at once. They all look superb. Going to be a lot of fun breaking those in. Any initial thoughts on flavour through them yet? I found the red reduction clay very strong in the way it effect the brew.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 15:32
by Chip
Too early to say, but front runners so far are the two Nosaka 200 ml, the one you were looking at and the reduction Nosaka. The one you were looking at handles even fukamushi pretty well due to its taller profile.
... actually there is a 5th Kyusu ... for another day ...
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 28th, '13, 16:28
by Tobias
Chip wrote:3 little Touju ... when I like an artisan, I tend to rebuy and keep looking to add.
Nice, I was planning to get
this one but someone beat me to it.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 29th, '13, 01:08
by Poohblah
Tobias wrote:Chip wrote:3 little Touju ... when I like an artisan, I tend to rebuy and keep looking to add.
Nice, I was planning to get
this one but someone beat me to it.
He looks like a madman from the hills in that last photo
I love how the pots look like cast iron though!
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 29th, '13, 03:30
by Alex
Yeah that pot he's holding looks amazing.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Jan 29th, '13, 07:52
by Chip
Tobias wrote:Chip wrote:3 little Touju ... when I like an artisan, I tend to rebuy and keep looking to add.
Nice, I was planning to get
this one but someone beat me to it.
I was looking too ...
Alex wrote:Yeah that pot he's holding looks amazing.
That kyusu mimicking a temple bell costs around 6-700 USD. Maybe more. Toru does offer a stripped down version for something like 285 USD. Still not cheap albeit, but he has sold at least 2 of them over the last month or two.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Posted: Feb 1st, '13, 04:22
by Alex
blairswhitaker wrote:I am still waiting on my new tachi masaki to arrive (paces impatiently and stares at mailbox.)
Are you still waiting?