¡Únete al movimiento de artesanía lenta!
¡& 10% de descuento + historias que valen la pena esperar!
Menú de pie de página
Política de devoluciones
política de privacidad
Envío
Contacto
Condiciones de servicio
Not a cup. A landscape in your palm.
This lacquerware cup holds 70ml of tea and a thousand years of craft. The surface swirls with color—ochre gold, forest green, ink blue, flashes of coral red—layered and flowing like minerals forming deep in the earth. Pick it up, and you hold something that looks like it was carved from time itself.
The colors on this Chinese lacquer tea cup are not painted. They emerge through a process of layering, curing, and polishing natural lacquer—dozens of coats applied over weeks. The result is a surface that resembles:
Each cup develops its own pattern. The one you receive exists nowhere else.
Look closely at the rim. It does not form a perfect circle. Instead, the edge rises and falls in gentle waves—shaped by hand, not machine. This uneven silhouette echoes distant mountain ridges and gives the cup a sculptural quality that invites touch. It is a detail that separates craft from manufacturing.
The palette shifts as your eye travels down the cup. Warm ochre and gold dominate the rim, then cool into green, blue, and deep black toward the base. Small bursts of coral red punctuate the surface like crystals catching sudden light. The effect is atmospheric—sunlit stone sinking into ocean depth.
In Chinese tea culture, a master cup—or "zhuren bei"—is a personal vessel chosen by the tea drinker for daily use. Unlike matching sets, a master cup reflects individual taste. It is held, studied, and seasoned over years of use. This natural lacquer teaware piece is made for that kind of relationship: intimate, lasting, irreplaceable.
True urushi lacquer cup making has no shortcuts. Sap is harvested from lacquer trees that have grown for a decade. Each layer must dry in controlled humidity before the next is applied. Final polishing—called "roiro" in Japanese tradition—brings out a mirror depth that photographs cannot fully capture. This cup carries that full process in every curve.
Rinse gently with warm water after use. Avoid abrasive sponges, dishwashers, and prolonged soaking. Dry with a soft cloth. Natural lacquerware becomes richer in luster over time—the more you use it, the more it glows.