Tea Sets
Published April 22nd, 2007 in Uncategorized.
In China, there are various kinds of exquisite tea sets of both practical and artistic values. Chinese tea sets are well known at home and abroad and favored by tea lovers through the ages. Over the long developing history of tea drinking in China, both the customs and the processes have gone through great changes. As for special tools for drinking tea, tea sets have also undergone an evolution.
A tea set, in the Western tradition is a suite of dishes sold in a group for use at afternoon tea or a formal tea party.
Tea sets vary greatly in quality and price, from inexpensive mass produced items to high end, limited edition items. The finest tea sets are made by well known manufacturers of porcelain or bone china. Another opulent tea set is the silver tea service, a formal tea set made of sterling silver, although again, mass produced sets in silverplate abound.
The accepted history of the tea set begins during the Han Dynasty (206-220 B.C.). At this time, tea ware was made of porcelain and consisted of two styles: a northern white porcelain and a southern light blue porcelain. It’s important to understand that these ancient tea sets were not the creamer/sugar bowl companions we know today. Rather, as is stated in a third century A.D. written document from China, tea leaves were pressed into cakes or bricks. These patties were then crushed and mixed with a variety of spices, including orange, ginger, onions, and flower petals. Hot water was poured over the mixture, which was both heated and served in bowls, not teapots. The bowls were multi-purpose, and used for a variety of cooking needs. In this period, evidence suggests that tea was mainly used as a medicinal elixir, not as a daily drink for pleasure’s sake.
In China,Major types of tea sets include: Fictile Tea Sets ,Porcelain Tea Sets,Metal Tea Sets,Bamboo and Wooden Tea Sets,Glass Tea Sets,Lacquer Tea Sets.
1. Fictile Tea Sets
Among all the fictile tea sets, the purple clay tea set made in Yixing is regarded as best tea sets in the word ,The purple clay teapot is made of unglazed clay, which is baked
with purple and red mud specially found in the local area. Since it is densely agglomerated and finely molded at a high temperature, such a teapot not only can hold water without leakage but also can absorb liquid and retain some of the flavor of the tea due to its porous nature unperceivable by naked eye. The purple clay teapot is slow in heat transfer, preventing one from scalding one’s hand. It can also keep tealeaves from spoiling in hot days. More over, such kind of teapot can stand sharp changes in temperature and even be put directly on fire to stew tea if required. The purple clay tea set also features simple design and unsophisticated color and takes various shapes, such as bamboo knot, lotus root, pine tree knot and bronze ware imitating that of the Shang Dynasties and Zhou Dynasties.
2. Porcelain Tea Sets

1) White-porcelain tea sets: the most famous white-porcelain producing area is Jingdezhen, and other areas include Liling of Hunan Province, Tangshan of Hebei Province and Qimen of Anhui Province. In the Yuan Dynasty, Jingdezhen was well known for its celadon that enjoyed a hot sale overseas.
2) Celadon tea sets: celadon tea sets began to enjoy popularity from the Jin Dynasty, and reached its height of splendor in the Song Dynasty when Longquange Kiln of Zhejiang Province, one of the five famous kilns at the time, produced various kinds of celadon products, including teapots, tea bowls, cups and trays, etc.
3) Black-porcelain tea sets: In the Song Dynasty (960-1279), tea contest was prevalent in Fujian. Contestants believed that black-porcelain tea cup made in Jian’an was the most suitable ware to improve tea quality, thus such tea sets gradually gained a high reputation far and near. As described in the Record of Tea by Cai Xiang of the Song Dynasty, To make the water appear limpid, better use black-porcelain cups. Cups made in Jian’an are dark purple in color, with fine lines like rabbit hair. The most notable advantage of these cups is that they are hard to cool down if heated for a long time due to their thick base. Cups made in other places, either thin or of purple color, cannot compare to such cups. Contestants don not use celadon cups.
3. Lacquer Tea Sets
Lacquer tea sets were put into use in the Qing Dynasty and mainly made in Fuzhou ,Fujian Province. Various kinds of lacquer tea sets were produced in Fuzhou, such as shining treasure sands, glazed spun gold, archaized porcelain, carved and paint and silver-embedded. After the adoption of new techniques, such as red gold dust and carved pattern of flowers, the tea sets became more colorful and lovable.
4. Glass Tea Sets
In modern times, glass tea sets have gone through great development. Glass, transparent and with dazzling luster, is a plastic material used widely. Using glass cup to make tea, one can enjoy a good view of the bright color of the water and the tender tealeaves that are pushed up and down when water is poured in and then slowly stretch. Watching such a process is like appreciating a kind of dynamic art, especially when one makes top-grade tea. Mist rises from green water in the crystal-clear glass cup, with tender tea buds and leaves lying at the bottom. However glass tea sets have some disadvantages, such as breakable and easier to transfer heat than porcelain,etc..
5. Metal Tea Sets
Metal has great advantage over other materials in tea storage, and tin is the best one compared to all other metals such as gold, silver and copper. Tin pot is mostly made with small mouth and long neck together with a tube-shaped body. Such kind of airproof tin pot can guard tea against moisture, oxidation, light and peculiar smell. In the Tang Dynasty, imperial family drank Guzhu tea which should be made with water from the Jinsha Spring. The spring water was sent directly to Chang’an in unbreakable tin pots. Of course ordinary people could not afford such pots as they were too expensive.
6. Bamboo and Wooden Tea Sets
In past days, large rural areas, including tea-producing areas,such as Fujian,Yunnan, used bamboo or wooden tea sets to make tea because they were cheap and with good quality. But such tea sets are seldom used nowadays, except some bamboo and wooden teapots that are used to store tea, especially teapots made of Boxwood and Reed-bamboo. These two kinds of teapots are artworks, both precious presents to friends and practical articles for one’s own use.
In the history of chinese tea culture, there were also tea sets made of jade, crystal and agate,etc., but which did not play an important role in the evolution of tea sets because they were expensive, hard to make and of little practical value.
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