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Tea tables — 160cm slab

Live-edge elm table

榆木活边茶桌

A single, hand‑finished live‑edge elm slab from Yunnan — embedded brass drainage channels, solid brass foot caps, and a silken oil‑cured surface that deepens with every session.

$1775USD · 32000 g

Weight
32000 g
Harvest
2025 harvest, air-dried
Processing
Kiln‑dried northern elm, hand‑planed, tenon‑joined crossbars, concealed brass drainage, five‑coat tung oil finish.
Sourced by

A slab from the edge of Kunming

Sandry Law found this slab in a third-generation workshop on the eastern outskirts of Kunming, where elm (yú mù, 榆木) has been cured for tea furniture for over a century. The tree was felled twenty kilometres north of the city, on a south‑facing slope that gave it a dense, stable grain. After three years of air‑drying under the Yunnan sun, the plank was kiln‑finished to a moisture content that tolerates the driest heated room or the most humid chá‑shì. The workshop’s master planed the surface by hand, following the natural taper of the live edge — no straight‑line rip‑cuts, only careful, respectful reduction. Two perpendicular crossbars are joined with blind mortise‑and‑tenon work, just as his grandfather taught, and capped with solid brass feet to protect floors and lift the table a perfect 22 cm from the ground, ideal for kneeling gōngfu sessions. Hidden within the thickest section are two brass drainage channels that funnel rinse water to a removable catch basin below — invisible from the top yet effortless to clean. When Sandry first tested the prototype with a 200ml gaiwan rinse, the water disappeared in seconds, and the tabletop remained dry and cool. That moment confirmed the table’s purpose: a quiet, enduring partner for the daily ceremony.

The leaf, brewed

Elm’s quiet luxury — grain, glow, and gentle warmth

dry leaf

Inspecting the raw slab: broad, flowing grain lines like ink wash on rice paper. A faint vanilla‑hay scent from kiln drying lingers on the un‑oiled surface.

wet leaf

After the first tung oil coat, the figure deepens into ribbons of amber and cocoa. The surface feels cool and smooth, yet the live edge keeps a tactile whisper of bark.

liquor

Under low tea‑room light, the tabletop takes on a honeyed translucence, revealing hidden quilting and birdseye knots that shift with your viewpoint.

aroma

A clean, woody aroma with hints of beeswax and dried meadow — never overpowering, even when warmed by a freshly poured gaiwan.

taste

Touch‑taste: the subtly undulating live edge invites trailing fingers. The table gives a satisfying weight, yet feels rooted and steady; the brass drainage gutters add a cool, precise counterpoint.

finish

With use, the oil‑cured surface develops a buttery patina, deepening in character — an heirloom in the making, each tea session a layer in its story.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
Season and maintain
Ratio
1:3 tung oil / citrus solvent
First infusion
Apply one coat, cure 24 h, lightly sand with 0000 steel wool, repeat for 4 coats total.
Subsequent
Recoat every 3–6 months with pure tung oil or beeswax; buff by hand.

Avoid prolonged pooling of water — the brass channels drain any spills swiftly. Use coasters for hot teapots; the slab breathes naturally with seasonal humidity shifts.

Sourced by

Sandry Law

Head of Procurement (China)

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