Tracing bamboo, paper, and the hands that shaped them
Sourcing this lamp started not in a showroom, but in a narrow alley in Fuzhou’s Cangshan District. Michael Zhan, our procurement specialist, was on a routine trip through Fujian’s bamboo-processing villages when he stopped at a family-run workshop that had been bending bamboo for furniture since the late Qing. The proprietor, a man in his seventies, still used steam boxes and jigs from his grandfather’s time. Michael spent two days there, testing how different bamboo wall thicknesses took the curve, and eventually chose a three-year-old moso bamboo for this frame — dense, even-toned, and resilient to the gentle flex of a floor lamp.
For the rice paper, he traveled west of Fuzhou to a tiny village where mulberry-fiber paper is still poured by hand on bamboo screens. Each sheet is laid one layer at a time onto a form, then sun-dried until it achieves a translucent, parchment-like quality. Michael selected a blend of three layers: the innermost for structural stability, the middle for light diffusion, and the outermost for a soft, tactile finish.
The lamp is assembled in a small workshop on the edge of Fuzhou, where artisans fit the paper shades onto the bent bamboo frames by hand. Every lamp Michael brings to tea.furniture carries the name of the paper maker and the bamboo bender — not as branding, but as a record of provenance. This is a piece made for long ceremony hours, with a replaceable shade that will age as gracefully as the tea-room floorboards.