Jun 1st, '10, 19:54
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by Chip » Jun 1st, '10, 19:54
Quite a collection Britt. I did not have a lot of time to look, but see quite a lot of Choun Kiln pieces! Awesome.
Nice earnings, Tim!
Very interesting Kyusu, Victoria. Smooth? Looks so textural ...
Thanks for sharing your newbies, Laura! Lovely colors.
Jun 2nd, '10, 20:23
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by Victoria » Jun 2nd, '10, 20:23
Chip wrote:
Very interesting Kyusu, Victoria. Smooth? Looks so textural ...
Thanks Chip, yes it is a very smooth pot.
And now for something I rarely do, which is post a pic before I have the cup in hand. But I bought this little beauty from Etsy last night and I am so excited:
http://www.etsy.com/shop/clayhands123

Drippy ... drip ... drip

Last edited by
Victoria on Jun 2nd, '10, 23:25, edited 1 time in total.
Jun 2nd, '10, 21:23
Posts: 226
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Location: Canada
by TubbyCow » Jun 2nd, '10, 21:23
Victoria, I *LOVE* that little drip off the one side. Great piece!
Jun 2nd, '10, 22:19
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Location: The foot of the great Smoky Mountains
by iannon » Jun 2nd, '10, 22:19
nice thick drippy glaze..sweet! wheres that potter been hiding? although i havent trolled etsy in a couple weeks either..
Jun 2nd, '10, 22:44
Vendor Member
Posts: 1518
Joined: Nov 13th, '09, 10:16
Location: Guilin, Guangxi China
by IPT » Jun 2nd, '10, 22:44
Here's a teacup made by a friend of mine in Taiwan. It is made of Yuankuang clay. The squiggle on the outside is a dragon. I love the contrast between the rough exterior and the smooth blue interior.
Size: 5.5cm Wide x 6cm High
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- Teachat1.jpg (35.59 KiB) Viewed 1487 times
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- Teachat2.jpg (33.25 KiB) Viewed 1487 times
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- Teachat3.jpg (40.41 KiB) Viewed 1487 times
Jun 2nd, '10, 23:22
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by Victoria » Jun 2nd, '10, 23:22
Thanks guys!
Wow, IPT, that's a beauty!
Jun 3rd, '10, 00:23
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Location: Los Angeles, CA
by debunix » Jun 3rd, '10, 00:23
Love the deep pools of blue.
Jun 3rd, '10, 02:04
Vendor Member
Posts: 1518
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Location: Guilin, Guangxi China
by IPT » Jun 3rd, '10, 02:04
Thank you
Jun 3rd, '10, 09:51
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by britt » Jun 3rd, '10, 09:51
Victoria wrote:Holy cow Britt!! I thought I was redirected to Artistic Nippon's page!
Hahaha! Some very nice wares.

Thanks. Most of the kyusu are from Toru and Japanese Hand Crafts, the yunomi from 2000 Cranes and Zencha, and the matcha chawan from Mogokorodo and Artistic Nippon. The Fujiyama matcha chawan replica was purchased as a special order from Toru because his price beat Hibki-ans by more than $100 (368 + shipping versus $505 including shipping). This chawan looks much better than the pictures, which are from the vendor's site.
Jun 3rd, '10, 09:55
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by britt » Jun 3rd, '10, 09:55
laura99 wrote:
Wow! What a collection Britt! Impressive.
Thanks. I have much more but I didn't post what I put in storage. Some of those items look good but aren't very functional so don't get used often. Mistakes like fancy handmade kyusu that clog even when brewing lighter steamed sencha, Hagi cups that leak, one Hagi cup that would be one of my favorites except it leaks and smells terrible, etc. these were packed up and put to rest.
Jun 3rd, '10, 10:00
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by britt » Jun 3rd, '10, 10:00
Chip wrote:Quite a collection Britt. I did not have a lot of time to look, but see quite a lot of Choun Kiln pieces! Awesome.
Thanks Chip. Since you're one of the resident Hagi experts, maybe you can answer a question. Most of the Hagi Yunomi I posted are by Noutomi Susumu. I also see items on sites like Artistic Nippon and Zencha by Noutomi Choun. They are both referred to as from Choun Kiln. Are these artists related or do they just use the same kiln?
Jun 3rd, '10, 10:08
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by Chip » Jun 3rd, '10, 10:08
Britt. Father and son. Choun is the father, and I believe the kiln founder. Noutomi Susumu joined the kiln in 1975 as an apprentice and continued to produce works very reminiscent of his father.
There is a mini cult following recently of both father and son.
Jun 3rd, '10, 20:33
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by camw » Jun 3rd, '10, 20:33
Chip wrote:Britt. Father and son. Choun is the father, and I believe the kiln founder. Noutomi Susumu joined the kiln in 1975 as an apprentice and continued to produce works very reminiscent of his father.
There is a mini cult following recently of both father and son.
There are 2 "Noutomi Choun", the father and also a younger brother of Susumu. The younger brother is now retired.
Jun 3rd, '10, 20:38
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by Chip » Jun 3rd, '10, 20:38
camw wrote:Chip wrote:Britt. Father and son. Choun is the father, and I believe the kiln founder. Noutomi Susumu joined the kiln in 1975 as an apprentice and continued to produce works very reminiscent of his father.
There is a mini cult following recently of both father and son.
There are 2 "Noutomi Choun", the father and also a younger brother of Susumu. The younger brother is now retired.
I see, where did you find this tid bit of information!
I have seen some confusing references to Choun ... that in this context might make more sense. But I never saw the specific reference to a brother of Susumu named Choun as well.
Don't forget, there is a Hagi topic here ... on page 68.
http://www.teachat.com/viewtopic.php?f= ... start=1005
Jun 3rd, '10, 20:43
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by camw » Jun 3rd, '10, 20:43
camw wrote:Chip wrote:
There are 2 "Noutomi Choun", the father and also a younger brother of Susumu.
I see, where did you find this tid bit of information!
Chip,
This info came from Masahiko Nishiki at Zencha.