Jan 15th, '14, 12:14
Posts: 666
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Location: Cambridge, USA
by steanze » Jan 15th, '14, 12:14
Jan 15th, '14, 21:56
Posts: 4536
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Location: Bangkok
by Tead Off » Jan 15th, '14, 21:56
Flagstaff House in Hong Kong. Located in Admiralty.
Jan 16th, '14, 18:30
Posts: 1592
Joined: Jul 21st, '10, 02:25
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Been thanked: 3 times
by bagua7 » Jan 16th, '14, 18:30
Jan 16th, '14, 23:24
Vendor Member
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Location: Malaysia
by JohnsonH » Jan 16th, '14, 23:24
Here's a teapot by Wang Wei 王伟, one of the good student from Master Wang Qiang 王强.
扁灯
Flat Lamp
Pure hand made with old clay known as Di Chao Qing 底槽清.

Jan 17th, '14, 00:50
Posts: 1885
Joined: Mar 22nd, '08, 22:26
Location: Yixing
by chrl42 » Jan 17th, '14, 00:50
JohnsonH wrote:Here's a teapot by Wang Wei 王伟, one of the good student from Master Wang Qiang 王强.
扁灯
Flat Lamp
Pure hand made with old clay known as Di Chao Qing 底槽清.

Good student from good master...so the pot shouldn't go wrong
Bian Deng is one of my fav shapes, it does show some glimpse of that
gongfu-ish mid-Qing era...peace.
Jan 17th, '14, 00:55
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Location: Malaysia
by JohnsonH » Jan 17th, '14, 00:55
chrl42 wrote:JohnsonH wrote:Here's a teapot by Wang Wei 王伟, one of the good student from Master Wang Qiang 王强.
扁灯
Flat Lamp
Pure hand made with old clay known as Di Chao Qing 底槽清.

Good student from good master...so the pot shouldn't go wrong
Bian Deng is one of my fav shapes, it does show some glimpse of that
gongfu-ish mid-Qing era...peace.
Thanks for your compliment, i believe you had seen some of their works including his Master Wang Qiang's art pieces. Their works is really something delicacy. Nice to know some friends who knows about them,
Jan 18th, '14, 20:46
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Location: NYC
by TIM » Jan 18th, '14, 20:46
A late Qing Dynasty, Kiln Color Change Yixing. Getting ready to brew some really old puerh.
Jan 18th, '14, 22:33
Posts: 489
Joined: May 11th, '13, 03:20
Location: Sacramento, California
by 茶藝-TeaArt08 » Jan 18th, '14, 22:33
Tim,
My appreciation and collection of Yixing lives vicariously through you.

I really appreciate the elegance and presence of that pot!
Blessings!
(Edited for grammar)
Jan 18th, '14, 23:47
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Location: NYC
by TIM » Jan 18th, '14, 23:47
茶藝-TeaArt08 wrote:Tim,
My appreciation and collection of Yixing lives vicariously through you.

I really appreciate the elegance and presence of that pot!
Blessings!
(Edited for grammar)
Thanks TeaArt

Jan 19th, '14, 16:48
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by bagua7 » Jan 19th, '14, 16:48
.
Last edited by
bagua7 on Jan 27th, '14, 20:27, edited 1 time in total.
Jan 20th, '14, 19:25
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Posts: 1990
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Location: NYC
by TIM » Jan 20th, '14, 19:25
Jan 21st, '14, 21:07
Vendor Member
Posts: 1990
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Location: NYC
by TIM » Jan 21st, '14, 21:07
Three Zhuni from Qing Dynasty, 1980's and 1990's.
Jan 26th, '14, 03:08
Posts: 702
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by the_economist » Jan 26th, '14, 03:08
Gorgeous pots from Tim always make it harder to post after
But I'll brave the shame and post my current heini tgy pot:
Just out of curiosity, does anyone know how these little red dots form? Is it just stray slip clay spilling out in the kiln? I mean this little dot in the top right on the lid:

Jan 26th, '14, 09:55
Posts: 682
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Location: on top of a mountain.
by gasninja » Jan 26th, '14, 09:55
No shame economist thanks for sharing. You can't compare your yixing collection Tim's. For most of us that would be like me comparing my four year old son''s finger painting on my refrigerator to the Louvre.
I have curious about spots as well. My new Hong ni pot has a black spot. I will post pics later.
Jan 27th, '14, 12:28
Posts: 4536
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Location: Bangkok
by Tead Off » Jan 27th, '14, 12:28
It's hard to tell by the photo. Things also can fly around in a kiln, landing randomly. Could be a splash, drip, who knows?