《牛盖井栏》Niu Gai Jing Lan! Zhang Huan is back, and here he continues his best for us as Senior Masters Lu Xu Feng and Cao Lan Fang, chose for Zhang Huan this time: The Niu Gai Jing Lan!, This time we have Zhang Huan working closely with Craftsman Nan Shan Lao Ren to produce this beautiful Niu Gai Jing Lan with engraved Plum Blossoms and Kai Shu style calligraphy, adorning both sides!
These series bring us to yet another chapter in our journey together here at RealZiSha, of understanding and holding Chinese Art and culture in your hands as you steep Chinese tea! ALL these special productions are the results of preceding months of planning, design, consultative and collaborative efforts between Senior Master Cao Lan Fang, Senior Master Lu Xue Feng, our Cao Family stock of clays, Craftsman Zhang Huan, us two Yi-Lei and Ian.

We wish all our dearest friends in you, to enjoy it, use it, savour it and feel the aura of our Chinese YiXing Art.
Zhang Huan partners hence this time with Nan Shan Lao Ren closely at the last stage pampering us ultimately with this Niu Gai Jing Lan work of Hei Zi Ni!
Assuming the user is right-handed,
Plum Blossoms engraving, faces the Guests,









Poem in Kai Shu 楷书 Calligraphy Style faces the Tea Master,

“水至清则无鱼人至察则无徒“
水太清澈就没有鱼生存,人如果过于精明苛察就没有朋友。 这句话出自《大戴礼记·子张问入官篇》,告诫人们为人处世要学会宽容和理解,不要对人或物要求过高,要保持一定的度,在严苛与宽容之间找到平衡。
This two lines mean to advise us, not to be overly strict and perfectionist when judging other people, and encourages us to be more big-hearted and accepting of the fact that other people are who we cannot control, and to welcome them as friends even though they are not perfect in our eyes. Be kind and more forgiving to others.
Dearest friend, enjoy your tea :-)






This is a highly sculpted and sumptuous work despite at a volume of 160ml~170ml! The slightly curved side walls, climbing upwards and at the shoulder blending cleanly at the edge, to come to an expansive, flat surface.



This flat surface is where Craftsman Zhang Huan performs the difficult Qian Gai interface. This is the FIRST Hei Zi Ni work where he construct the Qian Gai interface!






Zhang Huan REPEATS the same high level of sculpturing work at the base. From the edge inwards, he fashioned in diligently, one step of sculpturing, then a carefully pressed in base where it accommodates Zhang Huan's personal stamp in the middle. ALL very suave and shows his finesse!








Zhang Huan tops it up, pun intended, with the lid knob, which is another delightful mini sculpture of the Niu Gai! Adorably rounded, with both sides crafted so as to ease the grip and lift off of the the lid away from the body as one pours the hot water in during steeping, all a decisive, assured and comfortable movement. The ventilation hole is also sculpted with a small protrusion band to add a further level of charming complication to the whole work!



Lu Xue Feng and Cao Lan Fang chose it to be matched with our Cao Family's HEI ZI NI 黑紫泥 clay!!! SOLEMN, serious and understated, as it is the darkest Zi Ni alongside Wu Ni 乌泥!



~~~ Specially chosen for all of you friends!
Reference information for your perusal:
1) Hei Zi Ni 黑紫泥 is different from 2) Wu Ni 乌尼 and 2) Hei Ni 黑泥.
1) Hei Zi Ni 黑紫泥 is the darkest unadulterated Zi Ni clay in our fraternity, and it has a tinge of redness/brown-ness to it.
2) The extinct Wu Ni 乌尼 (previously availed two years ago, courtesy of Masters Lu Shun Rong, and Wang Chao Peng and their family association with the legendary figure Han Qi Lou) is equally dark but has no tinge of redness/brown-ness to it, and is much less sandy/grainy.
3) Hei Ni is Zi Ni with added MnO2.
Used here, this is the EXACT SAME Hei Zi Ni clay 黑紫泥 that our uncle:
ZiSha Religious Art PRIME MASTER CAO AN XIANG 曹安祥, uses in many of his works for the temples!








Hei Zi Ni is a type of Zi Ni, and is excellent for Sheng Pu Er 生普洱, and Shu Pu Er 熟普洱。
Hei Zi Ni is carefully chosen within our team for all of you, accounting for 1) the ZiSha model chosen, 2) the set volume for the top overall aura to be achieved.
We wish all our dearest friends in you, to enjoy it, use it, savour it and feel the aura of our Chinese YiXing Art.
Dearest friend, enjoy your tea :-)



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Craftsman Zhang Huan 张欢, since young, has embarked on his journey of crafting Austere ZiSha works of HIGH QUALITY. He had been noticed and hand-picked by Senior Cao Lan Fang and Senior Master Lu Xue Feng over observation of the past decade, and they have taken him in as their very hardworking disciple and CORE COLLEAGUE.
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Again, another tremendous labor of love by our trusted and committed collaborative Craftsman Zhang Huan. It is a team effort and we thank you dearest Friends for your grandest support to the honest and the dedicated Craftsladies and Craftsmen here left to fend the Fully-Handmade ZiSha Art.
Zhang Huan works with Senior Master Cao Lan Fang in her studio and all works are AMAZING high performance and high value. Take one home fast and savour his formidable, archetypically ZiSha classic craft and let his work accompany you on your tea journey!
Craftsman Zhang thanks you for your kindest support of his Work and adopting his work on your tea table while you steep teas for yourself and your family and Friends! Thank you!
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Hold one, hold up one, swing his work around. Carefully examine his Fully-Handmade work. Look at it from afar, from near, and it will grow on you. The whole piece grow on you because 1) he takes reference from what the Senior Masters chose for him, 2) and he amazingly crafts them up EXACTLY as to what the Senior Masters want from him: extreme fine detailing with MUCH THOUGHT on each part, with MUCH TIME spent on every part, section. Because this is what Fully-Handmade ZiSha Art should be, and HOW FULLY-HANDMADE ZISHA ART is so different from and light years ahead of the ubiquitous jigger-machined pots and half-handmade pots masquerading under the sales tagline of "fully-handmade zisha" pots. These latter JM/HHM pots are made in what we call 流水线 a.k.a. 'Factory-Line operation' whereby the main pot body after being jigger-machined or coming off from the mould, is passed to the next worker who fits on the spout, and subsequently this second worker will pass the pot on to another worker who will in turn fit on the handle. Continuing so, the pressed lid is likewise passed to another worker who fit on the lid knob.
EACH WORKER has NO IDEA what the other one is doing, and they are always working on fixed time lines stated by the boss. For example, the worker being "passed the baton" a pot with the spout just fixed onto the body by his colleague, will only focus on fixing on the handle,
with nil to little regard to WHETHER THE HANDLE fixed on will be cohesive with the spout. Each worker has NO idea of HOW THE FINAL POT WILL LOOK LIKE. Beyond poor craftsmanship and clay, the result of such processes are ugly pots with poor cohesiveness which experienced Artists, Craftsmen and collectors will tell from a metre away. Experienced people in us, do not need to pick up a pot to check whether it is fully-handmade or made of zisha, we can tell from a metre away just by looking at the pot.
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The keywords are: Detailing and Cohesiveness.
A GOOD Fully-Handmade ZiSha Work combines great detailing and cohesiveness.
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Explained, https://www.realzisha.com/blogs/news/actual-zisha-landscape-at-yixing , the Craftsman by selling his hard-worked ZiSha craft at $190-$240, $45-$65 goes to the cost of the craft, inclusive of the fees for the firing for the kiln operator (three times per pot), the packaging boxes, and between $32 to $52 for the clay (Zi Ni Di Cao Qing, Duan Ni and upwards) used per pot. Craftsman takes 3 days (fastest 2.5days) to craft a pot.
If he works 30 days a month without a single day of rest (no family time), he will craft 10-12 pots.
If he crafts for 25 days (five days of rest a month), his output will be 8-10 pots.
The success rate for Zi Ni (e.g. Di Cao Qing, Lao Zi Ni, Da Shui Tan etc) and Duan Ni (e.g. Jiang Po Ni, Qing Hui Duan, etc) is 70% on average. Some times the whole batch of 10 may fail. We have seen our Craftsmen suffer like this very often.
The success rate for Zhu Ni (e.g. Xiao Mei Yao Zhu Ni) pots is 60%, or 70% with most optimism and at the very, very best. Unfortunately.
All of us at RealZiSha of course, hope for one another, professional colleagues and all, that all the pots will survive firing at the kiln successfully.
[For ZiSha models/designs that are very challenging and more complicated to craft, the time taken to craft will be longer, and the failure rate will be higher as well. Zi Sha by its virtue, have the highest shrinkage rate of all ceramic clay. Zi Ni and Duan Ni thus have that 70% success rate, while Zhu Ni has even higher shrinkage rate and thus even lower success rate (the lowest of all ceramic clay.)]
Our Craftsmen are wholeheartedly committed to the cause of Fully-Handmade ZiSha Art and their strictness with their craft and dedication earn our respect. We give a big Thank You all of these Craftsmen, for they are saving what is our common precious tea culture: Tea + Fully-Handmade ZiSha Art and Craft. Your support is critical to their livelihood and the existence of this craft for all of the tea fraternity.
Thank you Friends!
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Our Senior Masters have given Craftsman Zhang Huan the full blessings with all of us. He is fully-fledged at RealZiSha. Most important, after all the hard work,
We are very happy that he is now with all of you.
Presenting Zhang Huan and his hard-worked and fine-worked Pieces for you. One by one.
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Also to be cherished and witnessed in this ZiSha Work, you : besides the usual important, critical and beautiful hallmarks of a Fully-Handmade ZiSha pot, this pot has the discontinuous and roughly horizontal marks evident on the inner walls, and these are called the: 泥凳纹 Ni Deng Wen, which are the marks left on the clay slab, complementary to the marks on the workbench of the Craftsman Zhang Huan; During the making of FHM ZiSha pots, the Craftsladies and Craftsmen will be using tools to cut the clay slabs, etc, and these cutting strokes will leave marks on the studio workbench. Especially the first major forceful cut across the table to delineate the clay she/he wants to utilize to form the main body of the body. Thus when the craftsman subsequently pound the clay slab on the workbench, these marks will be etched onto the clay slab. Thus you are "enjoying" the additional natural hallmarks of a Fully-Handmade pot. Even a partially handmade pot will not show these marks. And those fake, those Jigger-machined pots may show CONCENTRIC continuous circular lines, usually all parallel to one another, and extremely uniform.
Take note that these Ni Deng Wen lines are CONVEX AND PROTRUDING OUTWARDS from the flat clay slab wall, not marked inwards. They protrude *out* due to them being complementary to the worn and cut *in* lines on the wooden bench the Craftsman is working on.
Therefore, do cherish and have fun admiring the discontinuous, roughly horizontal lines on your pot's inner walls, are called, the 泥凳纹 Ni Deng Wen "Workbench Lines/Marks".
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