Hi, is there anyone their,
I feel like the Lone Ranger on here as anyone seen TONTO ?
George
Jul 19th, '19, 22:45
Posts: 49
Joined: Jul 10th, '19, 01:08
Location: Dingshu Town, Yixing 214221, Jiangsu, China
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Hi Barry,BarryRah wrote: Hi, is there anyone their,
I feel like the Lone Ranger on here as anyone seen TONTO ?
George
You're not the only keeping an eye on here.
I suggest if anyone can show off a little of their Kyusu?
Joe
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Ok every1 we can sing the ode to the kyusu 
Here i have one by shimizu ken. Sadly this artist recently died but he made very nice stuff from natural clays (sold through hojotea)

Bonus: Yamada Jozan III book

Here i have one by shimizu ken. Sadly this artist recently died but he made very nice stuff from natural clays (sold through hojotea)

Bonus: Yamada Jozan III book
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
I am new around here, so I thought I'd revive this thread by introducing myself through a few of my lovelies, starting with yokode-no-kyusus.
I'll start with the first one I bought. Fetched it in Osaka. Echizen-yaki. Hatayama kiln. 120ml. Unfortunately it has a crack under the spout and it's on its way to a Kintsugi intervention: Next is the one I am most attached to and use the most for sencha. A 120 ml Toknoname-yaki by Ito Seiji, alias Jinshu. Big fan. The white shiboridashi is 50ml by Junzo Maekawa. Kenzan Kiln. It's my main gyokuro pot.
I'll start with the first one I bought. Fetched it in Osaka. Echizen-yaki. Hatayama kiln. 120ml. Unfortunately it has a crack under the spout and it's on its way to a Kintsugi intervention: Next is the one I am most attached to and use the most for sencha. A 120 ml Toknoname-yaki by Ito Seiji, alias Jinshu. Big fan. The white shiboridashi is 50ml by Junzo Maekawa. Kenzan Kiln. It's my main gyokuro pot.
Re: Ode to the Kyusu
Another Jinshu. 300 ml. I love it, but t's large so it hasn't see much action. Yet.
Also large: a Susumu pot of 250ml made by Tatsuo Umehara at Hokuryu Kiln. The first one of the two unglazed red Tokoname clay pots I have that were masterfully fired to turn a deep and completely even black.
This acorn-shaped one was also made from Tokoname red clay by master Shoryu. It's 180 ml, so I use it when I brew sencha for two or three. From what I understand, to get this color, he fires his pieces a second time in reduction at a lower temperature and buried in rice husks which is what produces the smoke that turns them deep black.