I have been lurking here for years, and finally decided to post:
I have a few hundred to spend on teaware and am trying to figure out what to do with it. But the number of options and vendors are overwhelming my decision making capability.
Currently I use an electric kettle and 80 ml gaiwan (the right size for me, though I can even do smaller) for everything except sencha, where I have a random kyusu I bought at a new-closed teashop in NYC's UES (I forget its name). I mostly drink dancong, Taiwanese (gaoshan, hung shui, oriental beauty), and sencha. I know that leaf quality is more important than teaware, and have put my money there. I live in California's Bay Area, and seem to get pretty good tap water from the Sierras, though I occasionally find bottled water better for dancong.
So I am looking for some advice on how (and where) to spend my money. My priority is to maximize my enjoyment of the tea; of course I'd like whatever I buy to be beautiful, etc, but this is a lower priority.
The leading contenders are: 1) buying a tetsubin, 2) buying one of Hojo's clay pots, 3) buying a yixing. (I've ruled out chou zhou pots as too fragile/high maintenance.)
While we are speaking of yixing, I am totally confused by the differences in price across the vendors and how these relate to their capacity for making tea better. I know some of the price is for recognizable craftsmen, and some is for older pots which (allegedly?) have superior clay. But I'm still confused what separates, say, the low $100 pots on Life in a Teacup from the ~$200 pots of Teamasters or Jing, from the $400-500 pots of Sample Tea or EoT.
I know much of this is a rehash, but I am confused. Any help greatly appreciated.
Re: Where to invest my money?
If you'd like to see some beautiful teaware in person, check out Song Tea in San Francisco. Those pieces will maximize your enjoyment. 

Re: Where to invest my money?
Out of my price range for sure, but part of what you're paying for is Peter's experience and location. He carries a top-notch selections of teas too, and you can taste them in store.
I placed an order with Hojo back in October which included one of his magic clay shigaraki pots, as shown in my avatar. It brews fantastic green and oolong tea and I would definitely order another one when I have another $180 to spend on it. It's fun watching it change, and even in the 3 months I've had it, I can see the bottom lose its reddish tones and turn more brown.
I placed an order with Hojo back in October which included one of his magic clay shigaraki pots, as shown in my avatar. It brews fantastic green and oolong tea and I would definitely order another one when I have another $180 to spend on it. It's fun watching it change, and even in the 3 months I've had it, I can see the bottom lose its reddish tones and turn more brown.
Jan 11th, '15, 17:07
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futurebird
Re: Where to invest my money?
Hi welcome to teachat. What kind of Chinese tea do you enjoy? I find the yixing are like Pokemon -- hard to have just one.
Re: Where to invest my money?
whilst some have too many!...futurebird wrote:Hi welcome to teachat. What kind of Chinese tea do you enjoy? I find the yixing are like Pokemon -- hard to have just one.


Re: Where to invest my money?
Muadeeb - thanks for the rec on Song. I've been thinking about going over for a while, but your rec is likely to push me over. On the other hand, as you say, I am sure there is a big markup for location: how could there not be given real estate prices in SF?
Futurebird - From China, I mostly drink DC, though also some Wuyi and puer. I also drinks lots of Taiwanese tea.
Futurebird - From China, I mostly drink DC, though also some Wuyi and puer. I also drinks lots of Taiwanese tea.
Re: Where to invest my money?
strike a balance!ryancha wrote:I know that leaf quality is more important than teaware, and have put my money there.
when i started interested in tea, I was led to think that everything is about going for the best leaf qualities.. teawares are unimportant. i still have the $3 gaiwans and 50 cents tea cups somewhere in my storeroom.
just about a month into the hobby, i observed that top quality teas tend to be the most forgiving, easily very aromatic, not bitter, OK tasting with slipshod brewing, even using them in a piao-I, but I was not bringing out the "best" in the tea especially when these were premium leaves.
once you do not bring out the best in a tea, a lower grade may suffice.. a 40 cents/gram dancong i buy locally is not very much inferior to a $6/gram dancong
there are some tea companies that do sorting, i.e. same batch of tea, the largest leaves go into top grade, medium and some broken goes into regular grade.. so the differences may not be that big.
Jan 11th, '15, 21:35
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Joined: Feb 12th, '13, 16:21
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futurebird
Re: Where to invest my money?
Hmmm. Most people dedicate a yixing to a genre of tea. But it's hard to know what will be the right match till you get the teapot.
Buy something that you really love in terms of style, color, etc. Classic shapes are always nice but there is nothing better than having a teapot that makes you excited to brew because it is special.
Buy something that you really love in terms of style, color, etc. Classic shapes are always nice but there is nothing better than having a teapot that makes you excited to brew because it is special.
Re: Where to invest my money?
From the options you posted, I would say that "1) buying a tetsubin" would have the overall largest effect since you can use it brew across all the various genres you drink, ie good for oolong and good for sencha . It is more of an upfront cost than a single MOR yixing but if you are looking to maximize your "bang for buck" I'd go for that. Also, In my limited experience, the material of the kettle has a greater effect on the final product than the material of the teapot / gaiwan, but there may be significant disagreement in this regard from others..
Re: Where to invest my money?
I would agree. Each yixing that I have definitely has its unique effect on the tea, but the yixing and other clay kettles that I use have a much more obvious effect when compared to basic stainless steel kettles. I don't own a tetsubin. Very happy with clay kettles, zisha in particularAdmiralKelvinator wrote:From the options you posted, I would say that "1) buying a tetsubin" would have the overall largest effect since you can use it brew across all the various genres you drink, ie good for oolong and good for sencha . It is more of an upfront cost than a single MOR yixing but if you are looking to maximize your "bang for buck" I'd go for that. Also, In my limited experience, the material of the kettle has a greater effect on the final product than the material of the teapot / gaiwan, but there may be significant disagreement in this regard from others..
Re: Where to invest my money?
i have 4 tetsubins now.. but my daily use remains a clay kettle (lin's ceramic non-purion normal clay kettle)...BW85 wrote:
I would agree. Each yixing that I have definitely has its unique effect on the tea, but the yixing and other clay kettles that I use have a much more obvious effect when compared to basic stainless steel kettles. I don't own a tetsubin. Very happy with clay kettles, zisha in particular
Jan 12th, '15, 07:28
Posts: 714
Joined: Feb 12th, '13, 16:21
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futurebird
Re: Where to invest my money?
you can consider a kunzan from artistic nippon or take a peek at global.rakutenfuturebird wrote:I've never seen a tetsubin in the US for less than $350+
the yen's at a super low to USD now.. good time to bite!
Jan 12th, '15, 09:49
Posts: 1796
Joined: Sep 15th, '09, 16:11
Location: Wilton, New Hampshire USA
Re: Where to invest my money?
Yeah...... I'm watching a stack of Yen (in cash) depreciate badly.kyarazen wrote:the yen's at a super low to USD now.. good time to bite!



best,
..................john