Teapots for Gong Fu Cha – Yixing, Chaozhou & Jainshui
Moon Rabbit is a mystical figure from Chinese culture. If you look up during the full moon, you'll see him with a mortar, pounding elixir of life. This 200ml Yixing Teapot, shaped like a Dragon Egg, will make a lovely addition to your Gongfu tea set. Duan Ni Yixing clay (Zi Sha) has an excellent sand structure that softens bitterness and astringency, allowing your tea to shine.
This Yun Si Fang teapot blends the aesthetics of round and square forms with a delicate, elegant design. It's a masterful combination of symmetry and fluidity – where the roundness meets the structure of the square. This 100ml wood-fired teapot is made from DuanNi ZiSha from Ben Shan – the original Yixing clay mines. DuanNi clay has an excellent sand structure, which softens the harsh notes in tea by reducing bitterness and astringency.
Ce Ba (侧把) – side-handle teapot, is a reminder of the long conversation between Chinese and Japanese tea traditions. This 100ml wood-fired teapot is made from coarse-grained, aged Yixing DuanNi clay from Ben Shan – the original deposit, valued for its excellent sand structure, which softens the harsh notes in tea, helping the tea really show itself. The surface shows a warm, subdued sheen which will develop a fine patina over time.
This 110ml Rong Tian (容天) is a classic Yixing Teapot. Its name means "Accommodating Heaven," and the shape reflects that spirit. The body is round and full, with a low center of gravity that gives it a solid, grounded presence in the hand. It's a pot that feels generous in shape and character. This teapot is made from Zhao Zhuang Zhu Ni – a particularly fine kind of Yixing clay. This clay is prized for its ability to age and build character over time.
Xi Shi teapot from the finest ZhuNi Yixing clay is a piece of timeless elegance. Reminiscent of the legendary beauty of ancient China, this classical shape resembles Xi Shi's round face, the spout looks like a beautiful mouth, and the handle resembles her elegant hair bun. The size of 80ml makes it ideal for enjoying tea solo or with someone special, perfectly fitting into a pair of small Gong Fu Cha teacups. This Xi Shi teapot is designed to enhance the tea experience while adding a touch of elegance to your collection.
Shui Ping is a timeless design piece. This 110ml teapot is made of 20-year-old purple clay, Zi Ni. Aging the clay is a lengthy process that enhances the properties of the famous purple clay. Aging the clay helps the material mature: the particles break down more evenly, the moisture distribution stabilizes, and the clay becomes more homogeneous. It accounts for a warmer, more vibrant color and a better overall look and feel of the finished product.
Li Xing form is considered one of the most classic and time-honored shapes in Yixing pot making. This 110ml teapot is crafted from ZiNi clay from Huang Long Mountain (黄龙山) – the very core area of Yixing clay production. What gives this teapot its unusual black appearance is not paint or glaze but the result of a reduction firing process. It is finished with Sa Jin (紫砂洒金) – a traditional decorative technique that dots the surface with touches of gold, creating a contrast against the dark clay.
Qin Quan is one of the classic Yixing shapes, inspired by the bronze weights used during the Qin dynasty. This 180ml Yixing teapot has a fast pour and is made from ZiNi – slightly porous Yixing purple clay that gently softens rough edges in the tea while keeping the aroma clear and focused. The outside of the teapot is finished with HeiNi – another Yixing clay that fires to a deep black tone. This Qin Quan also features the classic Taotie (饕餮) mask motif.
This 140ml teapot is made of purple clay from the delta of the Yangtze River, aka Yixing clay or Zi Sha. Zi Ni clay is unique for its porosity and high iron content, which can affect tea taste by reducing astringency and bitterness. The shape is the classical Xi Shi (西施). Xi Shi was a famous beauty of ancient China. The shape resembles her full, round face, the spout looks like a mouth, gentle and graceful, and the handle resembles her elegant hair bun.
This 110ml handmade Chaozhou teapot is crafted in a classical Dragon Egg shape, caroled by Qing Dynasty poet Wu Dingme. Chaozhou clay, with its excellent heat-retaining properties, is high in iron oxide but less porous than Yixing ZiSha (primarily due to higher firing temperature) and is good at preserving tea's bright, floral notes. This teapot is a perfect match for your floral Dan Cong Oolongs.
This is a 150ml handmade Jianshui Zitao teapot. Density is what makes Jianshui teaware the most versatile of the four famous clays. You can brew Sheng Pu-erh in it one afternoon and Dan Cong Oolong the next. The two-tone color you see on this pot (warm red-brown on the outside, deep black on the inside) comes from reduction firing. This teapot is perfect for three drinkers, generous for two, and light enough for a solo session.
Tokoname teapots date back over 800 years ago to the Kamakura Period. The clay inside reacts with tannins in the tea to decrease bitterness. Carefully crafted in Aichi prefecture, this 330ml teapot is well thought through and has a mesh lining filter inside.
What can be more enticing than watching rising steam, listening to crackling charcoal, boiling water, and a Chaozhou clay kettle clacking lid? The Chaozhou charcoal stove and clay kettle are a must-have if you are serious about Gong Fu Cha. It will transform the entire tea experience by taking it to the next level. Many argue that water boiled on the open fire in a clay kettle is so much better than the one boiled in a stainless steel electric kettle.
In the set: Yixing Teapot (Zi Sha: Zi Ni), and two sets of matching Yixing Clay Zi Ni Aroma Teacups. Compared to glass, porcelain, glazed teapots, or even other ZiSha clays, ZiNi clay enhances the flavors and aromas of tea by reducing bitterness and astringency.
The “Scrolling Clouds” Handmade Gong Fu Cha set brings together four handmade pieces: a Jianshui Teapot, Teapot Rest, and two Teacups. All pieces are made from Jianshui Zitao (建水紫陶) – the unglazed purple pottery of southern Yunnan. Jianshui clay is dense, iron-rich, and low in porosity, which makes it more versatile than many other clay teawares. It doesn’t absorb aroma too strongly or lock itself to one tea type, so the set can be used for pu-erh, oolong, black tea, and other fragrance-forward teas.
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About Teapots for Gong Fu Cha – Yixing, Chaozhou & Jainshui [+]
Teapots in this collection are either handmade or half-handmade and sourced directly from the artisans who made them. These are working teapots built for Gong Fu Cha (功夫茶 or 工夫茶), the Chinese art of mindful brewing, where the vessel you choose matters almost as much as the tea inside it.
Yixing Zisha (宜兴紫砂) – The Classic Chinese Clay Teapot
The most revered teapots in Chinese tea culture come from Yixing (宜兴), a city in Jiangsu province whose unique purple clay – Zisha (紫砂) has been prized by tea connoisseurs for over five centuries. Yixing clay's breathable microstructure and steady heat retention soften some of the tea's harsher edges, producing a rounder, sweeter liquor. Our collection spans three primary clay types:
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Zi Ni (紫泥) – Purple Clay: The most classic Yixing clay, and the most versatile. Its breathable micro-structure and balanced heat retention make it a natural companion for pu-erh, aged teas, and darker oxidized oolongs. Some of our Zi Ni teapots are crafted from clay aged for decades – a process that increases plasticity, produces a warmer, more vibrant color, and stabilizes the clay’s structure.
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Zhu Ni (朱泥) – Red Clay: A fine-grained clay with a distinctive red-to-vermilion color after firing. During firing, Zhu Ni exhibits a high shrinkage rate, requiring the maker to exercise skill and precision. The clay's tight structure and sensitivity to temperature make it a sought-after choice for high-fragrance teas, such as Dan Cong oolongs or red (black) teas.
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Duan Ni (段泥) – Layered Clay: A clay category that often forms where Zi Ni (紫泥) and Lü Ni (绿泥) occur together in the same ore seam, resulting in a range of colors from golden-beige to light yellow. Duan Ni has a stronger sand structure than Zi Ni, making it somewhat more absorbent – a quality that tends to soften bitterness and astringency in the cup.
Chaozhou Clay (潮州红泥) – From the Birthplace of Gong Fu Cha
Chaozhou, in Guangdong province, is where Gong Fu Cha was born, and Chaozhou clay teapots remain central to that tradition. Our Chaozhou teapots are made from Chaozhou Hong Ni (潮州红泥), sourced from the Feng Xi (枫溪) region near Chaozhou city. Rich in iron oxide, this clay fires to a striking red-orange with a natural sheen, at temperatures around 1000°C. Its pliable nature allows for thin-walled construction and wheel-throwing, producing pots with excellent sensitivity to heat. Chaozhou clay is especially prized for preserving tea's bright, floral notes, making it a good choice for Phoenix Dan Cong oolong – the region's most celebrated tea.
Jianshui Clay (建水紫陶) – From Birthplace of Tea
Jianshui purple pottery (建水紫陶) comes from Jianshui County in Yunnan Province and is counted among the four great pottery traditions of China alongside Yixing, Chaozhou, and Nixing ware. The tradition evolved through successive dynasties – celadon during the Song, blue and white during the Yuan, coarse ceramics during the Ming, before arriving at the purple pottery form as it is known today during the Qing dynasty. Jianshui’s deposits contain red, yellow, purple, cyan, and white clays. Potters blend these clays into recipes that showcase structural strength and a characteristic color palette. The surface is unglazed. The fired teaware is polished with local river sand, producing a finish described as having "body like iron, color like copper, reflection like a mirror, and sound like a chime." Decoration is applied before firing through an inlay technique: designs are carved into the unfired clay, sometimes filled with contrasting-colored clay slip, so that after polishing, the artwork sits flush with the surface rather than sitting on top of it. The dense, thick-walled body retains heat well, making Jianshui particularly suited to teas brewed at higher temperatures – pu-erh, dark oolongs, aged teas, and dianhong.
Tokoname Kyusu (急須) — For Japanese Green Tea
Our Kyusu (急須) comes from Tokoname, in Aichi Prefecture – one of Japan's six original kiln traditions, with over 800 years of pottery history. Tokoname clay is naturally rich in iron oxide, which softens water and helps bring out the inherent sweetness of Japanese green teas while diminishing bitterness. The side-handle design allows for precise, controlled pouring – important when working with the low temperatures and short infusion times that sencha and gyokuro require.
How to Choose
For Gong Fu Cha, look for a volume of 60–200ml, depending on how many people you're brewing for. Here is a comprehensive guide on what to pay attention to when choosing a teapot.
Unglazed clay teapots should never be washed with soap. The clay is porous, and chemical detergents will spoil it. The teapots season gradually with use, and that process is part of what makes them special.