I happened upon an Art fair going on while walking around down town yesterday, and low and behold labeled as a Wine Cup I saw this and had to have it. I think I am going to send it off for office use, but it is a decent mid sized yunomi type vessel.
Jun 4th, '11, 13:12
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Jun 5th, '11, 13:10
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
I just thought I would share a few photos with you all. A friend asked me to photograph some of my old tea containes, so I thought I would also add them here. I love their imagry.
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Jun 5th, '11, 13:23
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Ohhh, cool IPT!!! Hits a real soft spot for me!!! Old Chinese canisters are so unobtainium in the West.
Nice find Adam!
Wowza, that is a fantastic piece Hope.
Nice find Adam!
Wowza, that is a fantastic piece Hope.
Jun 5th, '11, 14:02
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Thank you Chip. They are VERY hard to find on the mainland, but in Hong Kong, they are much easier. Here, tea was generally not sold in pretty packaging and the packaging was generally discarded or used until it disintigrated. So, Hong Kong is about it. I have a few friends there who are always on the lookout for tea containers for me.Chip wrote:Ohhh, cool IPT!!! Hits a real soft spot for me!!! Old Chinese canisters are so unobtainium in the West.
Jun 5th, '11, 14:18
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Usually in the West, any intereresting tin includes some really nasty tea. Sometimes I will buy into it ... and the tea can give me the heeby jeebies just looking at it.IPT wrote:Thank you Chip. They are VERY hard to find on the mainland, but in Hong Kong, they are much easier. Here, tea was generally not sold in pretty packaging and the packaging was generally discarded or used until it disintigrated. So, Hong Kong is about it. I have a few friends there who are always on the lookout for tea containers for me.Chip wrote:Ohhh, cool IPT!!! Hits a real soft spot for me!!! Old Chinese canisters are so unobtainium in the West.
Jun 5th, '11, 15:06
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Do you mean new tea tins, or old ones? With modern tea tins, I usually find the cooler the tea tin, the crummier the tea in it is.
I have a few antique tea tins that still have tea in them. That is incredibly exciting for me because the processing techniques of the old teas are sometimes different than they are now, so it is really very valuable to see the old teas, even if they are undrinkable.
I have a few antique tea tins that still have tea in them. That is incredibly exciting for me because the processing techniques of the old teas are sometimes different than they are now, so it is really very valuable to see the old teas, even if they are undrinkable.
Jun 5th, '11, 16:22
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Most are new teas, though sometimes I find a "new" tea in a Chinatown shop that has clearly been around a longgggg time.IPT wrote:Do you mean new tea tins, or old ones? With modern tea tins, I usually find the cooler the tea tin, the crummier the tea in it is.
I have a few antique tea tins that still have tea in them. That is incredibly exciting for me because the processing techniques of the old teas are sometimes different than they are now, so it is really very valuable to see the old teas, even if they are undrinkable.
But nothing like yours!!!
Jun 5th, '11, 16:40
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Well, since you are interested Chip, here are some more tea tin photos for you. This is a mid-nineteenth century English tea tin with Chinese designs embossed on it. I have yet to decide what tea it will hold.
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Jun 5th, '11, 18:14
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Hopefully something that was popular with the English/British in the mid 19th CenturyIPT wrote: This is a mid-nineteenth century English tea tin with Chinese designs embossed on it. I have yet to decide what tea it will hold.
Possibly Bohea
wikipedia wrote:Bohea (Chinese: 武夷茶; pinyin: wǔyí chá, a word derived from the Wuyi Mountains in northern Fujian, China), a kind of oolong,[1] or, in the 18th and early 19th centuries, black tea generally,
Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Uhm...those are...how do you say...awesome.IPT wrote:Well, since you are interested Chip, here are some more tea tin photos for you. This is a mid-nineteenth century English tea tin with Chinese designs embossed on it. I have yet to decide what tea it will hold.
Where did you get them. (please tell story)
Jun 5th, '11, 23:54
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
Thank you. I get them from all over the place. I do not have any really interesting stories attached to any of them though. I have more, but have not photographed them. I also have a lot that I use for tea storage. I like to actually use the old pieces. the ones with the paper labels though I do not use for fear of damage.
I believe I will be storing some zhengshan xiaozhong (正山小钟)in the tin one. I believe it is fitting, since it is the tea that kind of started the Red (Black) Tea craze in England.
I believe I will be storing some zhengshan xiaozhong (正山小钟)in the tin one. I believe it is fitting, since it is the tea that kind of started the Red (Black) Tea craze in England.
Jun 6th, '11, 02:06
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
So cool, IPT ... never saw anything like that one.
Jun 6th, '11, 06:34
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
I am very happy with it. It is in almost mint condition, and considering it is around 150 years old and of a very soft metal, that is pretty amazing. My Seigan SO arrived today.
Jun 6th, '11, 08:14
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Re: NEWEST CHAPTER! Show Off Your Pots and Cups XVI
I have been taking a lot of photos today, so here is another one. I had to buy this tea container for the Chinglish. Even translated into Chinese it makes no sense.
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