This 150ml Jianshui Zitao (建水紫陶) teapot is handmade by Cai Wen Juan (蔡文娟). The body has a classic rounded silhouette – wide at the base, gently tapered toward the lid, with a clean ring handle, a short straight spout, and a sculpted finial on the lid. Scrolling cloud reliefs (云纹) wrap the body, broken on one side by a small seal stamp. This teapot is perfect for three drinkers, generous for two, and light enough for a solo session.
Jianshui Zitao (建水紫陶 – "Jianshui Purple Pottery") is one of the Four Famous Pottery Traditions of China, alongside Yixing Zisha (宜兴紫砂), Qinzhou Nixing (钦州坭兴), and Rongchang Anfu (荣昌安富). The tradition is centered in the city of Jianshui in southern Yunnan, where it has been practiced since the Qing dynasty Daoguang era (1821–1850) and was inscribed as Chinese national intangible cultural heritage. The clay comes from Five-Color Mountain (五彩山 – Wucai Mountain), where five mineral-rich clays – red, yellow, white, blue-green, and purple are mined and blended into the dense, iron-rich body that gives Jian Shui teaware its character. Jianshui teaware is unglazed and, after firing, polished with stones until the surface takes on a smooth, semi-matte sheen that deepens with use.
The two-tone color you see on this pot (warm red-brown on the outside, deep black on the inside) comes from reduction firing (还原烧). The clay is blended to fire red; both the exterior and interior start as the same material. During firing, the pot's interior sits in a low-oxygen atmosphere inside the closed vessel, which reduces the iron in the clay and turns it black, while the exterior, exposed to more oxygen, stays red. It is the same clay, the same body, shifted into two colors by the kiln atmosphere alone. Open the lid, and you can see the line where red meets black – the boundary between oxidation and reduction, drawn by the fire.
Jian Shui teaware is dense, with very low porosity. Density is what makes it the most versatile of the famous clay teapots. Unlike Yixing, which absorbs tea oils and gradually "memorizes" a particular flavor, Jianshui does not season significantly. You can brew Sheng Pu-erh in it one afternoon and Dan Cong Oolong the next. The high iron content softens the water slightly, and the dense body holds heat well without “eating away” aromatics. Jian Shui particularly suits Sheng and Shou Pu-erh, Danong Oolong, Wuyi Yancha, Dian Hong, and other fragrance-forward teas.
• Material: Jianshui Zitao (建水紫陶)
• Maker: Handmade by Cai Wenjuan (蔡文娟)
• Capacity: 150ml
• Filter: ball filter
NOTE: Avoid using detergents when cleaning.