How a tea master shaped the light
Gao Liuzhou spent his early years in Chaozhou, studying gongfu cha under old masters who insisted that the best tea was poured before dawn, under the low-hung oil lamps of their ancestral halls. Later, when he began hosting his own sessions in a glass-walled Beijing studio, he found that track lighting killed the intimacy of the ceremony. One evening, a local glassblower brought a half-finished pendant — blown with tiny air bubbles trapped in the glass — and hung it from a bamboo pole 100 cm above the chá pán. The tea liquor turned to liquid amber, the potter’s hands emerged from shadow, and the whole room exhaled. Gao worked with the artisan for eighteen months to refine the shape and the warm-low color. The glass recipe uses a trace of iron oxide to filter out blue wavelengths, mimicking firelight. The brass cap is machined by a fifth-generation metalworker in Foshan. Every unit is assembled by hand and tested in Gao’s own tea room. When you dim the light to 10%, you’ll notice it doesn’t mimic sunset — it mimics embers. That was the brief.