Nice papaya pots! What era are they from?
Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
They are from the 50s - 70s period.Zared wrote:Nice papaya pots! What era are they from?
*edited... apologies.. just realized the typo.
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Last edited by OCTO on Aug 14th, '18, 11:06, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
We don't often see this shape here so you should post some more pics of them. They look nicely done for sure.
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Here are two pots I got from Yunnan Sourcing about ten days ago. Been using both of them for yancha.
Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
It’s 350cc... ZhuNi.tingjunkie wrote:Nice! What is the volume?OCTO wrote:![]()

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Last edited by OCTO on Aug 15th, '18, 09:38, edited 1 time in total.
Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Zared wrote:We don't often see this shape here so you should post some more pics of them. They look nicely done for sure.
Here you go....


These two are from the 50s - 60s period.



This one is from the 70s




Cheers!
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Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Size: Exactly 100 ml with the lid on
Age/Year: New
Walls: Thick but I'm not sure
Pour: About 10 seconds
Source: Yunnan Sourcing
Tea Pairing: Yancha (DHP, Rou Gui, etc.)
Info: I used this continuously for a bit over a week when I got it. It now has a very distinct smell inside that my wife describes as "shea butter".
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Zared wrote:Zared, a quick search of this website reveals many conversations about slip cast. They aren't worth a lot of $, but they can work well for tea, and are unlikely to be unsafe. Since I paid 5$ for the pots that look slipcast, I think I will be OK. They both dribble when they have tea in them, so I'm going to look into what to do about that.teapotluck wrote: I'm a newbie, but as my User ID implies, I have good luck finding tea pots at antique stores for very little $$.
I'd recommend not using those pots. The metal one is meant for decorative purposes only and likely made unsafe materials. The clay ones look like slip cast chemical pots to me. The porcelain pot is likely fine for tea.
The light blue clay may have been created by use of a blue mineral mixed into white clay. Anyway, the main point of this thread seems to be how to use your pots well, and the two slip cast pots seems to do best with green tea. The rooster pot so far seems to treat pu er the best.
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Hello everyone, I am new here from Vancouver, Canada. As recommended by some folks here I did some reading prior to purchasing. Read (more like skimmed
) the Stonewares of Yixing by K. S. Lo. I think I still paid a hefty sum since I recently got this at an auction in N.Y. but I do love the design of this enamel yixing pot. This is my third yixing pot.
I haven't "officially" used it yet since I just got it yesterday but I tested it tonight and here's what I have:
- Clay type: likely zhini? Low/Med/High fired? comparing it from my zhu ni (high fired) and other zhini (low fired) this appears to be somewhat in the middle. So medium fired?
- Size of pot in ml or oz. 400 ml with lid on
- What year/decade the pot was made. Was told it was from early to mid 19th century
- If the pot is thin-walled, medium, or thick-walled. Not sure...feels like medium to me
- How long is the pour? long pour on a single hole 20-22 seconds
- Where you acquired the pot. Eddie's Auction
- What type of tea you make with it. Since it is western-large, I will highly likely use some roasted green tea in it...I'm currently toying with Hojicha. Or anything not too expensive for daily tea brewing
- What qualities the pot has on tea. i.e. Why do you like to brew a certain tea in it, and what does it do for that tea? I haven't tried it yet because I would like to ask people's opinion on whether an enameled yixing is safe for "seasoning". I don't want anything happening to the enamel. Thoughts and advice would be well appreciated.
Thanks,
Cathy

I haven't "officially" used it yet since I just got it yesterday but I tested it tonight and here's what I have:
- Clay type: likely zhini? Low/Med/High fired? comparing it from my zhu ni (high fired) and other zhini (low fired) this appears to be somewhat in the middle. So medium fired?
- Size of pot in ml or oz. 400 ml with lid on
- What year/decade the pot was made. Was told it was from early to mid 19th century
- If the pot is thin-walled, medium, or thick-walled. Not sure...feels like medium to me
- How long is the pour? long pour on a single hole 20-22 seconds
- Where you acquired the pot. Eddie's Auction
- What type of tea you make with it. Since it is western-large, I will highly likely use some roasted green tea in it...I'm currently toying with Hojicha. Or anything not too expensive for daily tea brewing
- What qualities the pot has on tea. i.e. Why do you like to brew a certain tea in it, and what does it do for that tea? I haven't tried it yet because I would like to ask people's opinion on whether an enameled yixing is safe for "seasoning". I don't want anything happening to the enamel. Thoughts and advice would be well appreciated.
Thanks,
Cathy
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Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Imho it doesn’t look very old. More photos are needed though to make an accurate judgment.LadyFortuna wrote: Hello everyone, I am new here from Vancouver, Canada. As recommended by some folks here I did some reading prior to purchasing. Read (more like skimmed) the Stonewares of Yixing by K. S. Lo. I think I still paid a hefty sum since I recently got this at an auction in N.Y. but I do love the design of this enamel yixing pot. This is my third yixing pot.
I haven't "officially" used it yet since I just got it yesterday but I tested it tonight and here's what I have:
- Clay type: likely zhini? Low/Med/High fired? comparing it from my zhu ni (high fired) and other zhini (low fired) this appears to be somewhat in the middle. So medium fired?
- Size of pot in ml or oz. 400 ml with lid on
- What year/decade the pot was made. Was told it was from early to mid 19th century
- If the pot is thin-walled, medium, or thick-walled. Not sure...feels like medium to me
- How long is the pour? long pour on a single hole 20-22 seconds
- Where you acquired the pot. Eddie's Auction
- What type of tea you make with it. Since it is western-large, I will highly likely use some roasted green tea in it...I'm currently toying with Hojicha. Or anything not too expensive for daily tea brewing
- What qualities the pot has on tea. i.e. Why do you like to brew a certain tea in it, and what does it do for that tea? I haven't tried it yet because I would like to ask people's opinion on whether an enameled yixing is safe for "seasoning". I don't want anything happening to the enamel. Thoughts and advice would be well appreciated.
Thanks,
Cathy
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Finally, I learned how to attach more photos!Zared wrote:Imho it doesn’t look very old. More photos are needed though to make an accurate judgment.LadyFortuna wrote: Hello everyone, I am new here from Vancouver, Canada. As recommended by some folks here I did some reading prior to purchasing. Read (more like skimmed) the Stonewares of Yixing by K. S. Lo. I think I still paid a hefty sum since I recently got this at an auction in N.Y. but I do love the design of this enamel yixing pot. This is my third yixing pot.
I haven't "officially" used it yet since I just got it yesterday but I tested it tonight and here's what I have:
- Clay type: likely zhini? Low/Med/High fired? comparing it from my zhu ni (high fired) and other zhini (low fired) this appears to be somewhat in the middle. So medium fired?
- Size of pot in ml or oz. 400 ml with lid on
- What year/decade the pot was made. Was told it was from early to mid 19th century
- If the pot is thin-walled, medium, or thick-walled. Not sure...feels like medium to me
- How long is the pour? long pour on a single hole 20-22 seconds
- Where you acquired the pot. Eddie's Auction
- What type of tea you make with it. Since it is western-large, I will highly likely use some roasted green tea in it...I'm currently toying with Hojicha. Or anything not too expensive for daily tea brewing
- What qualities the pot has on tea. i.e. Why do you like to brew a certain tea in it, and what does it do for that tea? I haven't tried it yet because I would like to ask people's opinion on whether an enameled yixing is safe for "seasoning". I don't want anything happening to the enamel. Thoughts and advice would be well appreciated.
Thanks,
Cathy

Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Hello!
Please help me, where should I get my first Yixing Clay Pot? I could pay more than 100USD+ so that is not a problem, I just need a quality one. Please help me out!
Please help me, where should I get my first Yixing Clay Pot? I could pay more than 100USD+ so that is not a problem, I just need a quality one. Please help me out!
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
Hi, i'm new here. Need help identifying this pot, ex: artist, year made, etc. Thanks in advance.
Last edited by johan65 on Jan 30th, '19, 04:39, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Official/Different Yixing Show Off Topic!
There are already a bunch of threads that answer your question.azteke wrote: Hello!
Please help me, where should I get my first Yixing Clay Pot? I could pay more than 100USD+ so that is not a problem, I just need a quality one. Please help me out!
This would be my first choice for good quality pots at reasonable prices.
https://emmettsteas.weebly.com