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Tea tables — Low gongfu tables

Bamboo gongfu table — 100cm

<i>Zhú gōngfū chá zhuō</i>

竹功夫茶桌

A lightweight, self-draining low table of laminated bamboo — clean-lined and crafted for everyday ceremony, from a Zhejiang workshop that treats timber with the same patience as tea.

$525USD · 11000 g

Weight
11000 g
Processing
Laminated bamboo, precision-cut, hand-sanded, built-in drainage channel
Sourced by

Sourced by Michael Zhan — an Anji workshop with three generations of bamboo craft

I first visited this workshop in the hills outside Anji on a sourcing trip for a tea-table concept that didn’t yet exist. The owner, a third-generation bamboo worker, showed me a prototype of a low table with a built-in drainage channel — originally designed for a Chaozhou tea house that never opened. The bones were there: a 100cm span of laminated bamboo, light enough for one person to carry but sturdy under a full gongfu session, with a sloped channel that funnels water into a hidden tray beneath. What struck me was the surface. They had abandoned conventional varnish in favour of a high-temperature pressing that sealed the natural sugars and rendered the bamboo almost impervious to humidity. The workshop uses Moso bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis) harvested at four years, when the lignin content is ideal for stability. After cutting, the strips are stacked cross-grain, heat-pressed, and then hand-sanded for six passes — enough to close the pores without creating a plastic-like film. We went through three iterations before the channel pitch matched our draining speed standard. This lot is from the September 2025 batch, finished just as the weather turned cool enough to prevent expansion checks. Every table carries the workshop’s stamp and comes with a small bottle of camellia oil for first feeding.

The leaf, brewed

A sensory profile of the bamboo surface

dry leaf

Pale honey-bamboo grain, tight horizontal striations, a faint natural sweetness reminiscent of fresh hay.

wet leaf

After a wipe with a damp cloth, the surface darkens to a warm amber, releasing a subtle grassy aroma.

liquor

The tabletop reflects light softly, with a matte sheen and even tone — no lacquer, no gloss.

aroma

Clean bamboo scent, with a whisper of sun-heated wood and the barest trace of the workshop’s air.

taste

Smooth to the touch, with a gentle friction that grips a gaiwan base; the self-draining channel feels seamless, directing water efficiently without splash.

finish

A lingering coolness where the bamboo meets the forearm, and a quiet satisfaction in its understated durability — it only deepens with use.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
care

Wipe with a damp soft cloth after each session. Avoid prolonged soaking or dish soaps. Once a year, feed the bamboo with a light coat of food-safe mineral oil to preserve its lustre and prevent drying.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

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