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Side tables & stands — small walnut

Walnut kettle stand — small

<span class="italic">N/A</span>

核桃木煮水壶架(小号)

A compact walnut side table built to hold a kettle and a scale — the steady, unassuming partner to your gongfu workspace.

$199USD · 3200 g

Weight
3200 g
Processing
Solid finger-jointed walnut, hand-finished with tung oil. Mortise-and-tenon joinery. Dimensions: 30 × 40 cm top, 45 cm height.
Sourced by

From a Kunming workshop to your tea room

Sandry Law first came across this kettle stand on a supplier visit to a small joinery in the hills west of Kunming — a three-person workshop run by a family of carpenters who had once made altar tables for village temples. As home tea-practice boomed, they turned their hands to tea furniture, applying the same joinery methods to pieces scaled for modern apartments. The walnut they use is sourced from the same forests that supply the area’s pu-erh tea-factories — a hard, slow-grown wood that resists warping even when a full kettle of boiling water is placed on it day after day. Sandry worked with the maker to refine the dimensions: a top plate big enough for a 1.2 L electric kettle plus a digital scale with room to spare, yet still compact enough to sit beside a full chá pán. The legs are subtly splayed for stability, and the string shelf underneath holds a spare towel or a small tin of leaf. Each piece ships flat-packed with a tiny bottle of the same tung oil the workshop uses, so you can maintain the original protective coat. It’s not a statement piece — it’s the silent workhorse of your gongfu ritual.

The leaf, brewed

Warmth under the fingertips — a quiet piece that lets the tea take centre stage

dry leaf

Sanded walnut with a fine, open grain. Tight growth rings show slow-maturing wood from Yunnan’s high-altitude slopes.

wet leaf

After years in a tea room, the oiled surface takes on a deeper mahogany hue, softening to the touch without ever feeling slick.

liquor

The matte finish drinks in light, reflecting back a gentle glow that never competes with the glass of your gongfu cup.

aroma

A faint, clean scent of tung oil lingers when new — it cures to a neutral butteriness that never interferes with the fragrances rising from the tea tray.

taste

This piece has no flavour, but its presence is deeply satisfying: the exact right height to rest your elbow while pouring, the exact right space for a Yixing pot and a set of scales.

finish

The stand remains stable and silent through an hour-long session — no wobble, no creak, just the quiet confidence of a well-built piece.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
Not applicable — furniture item.
Ratio
Water temp
First infusion
Subsequent

Place on a level floor. For wet-wipe cleaning, use a barely damp cloth and re-apply tung oil once a year. Keep away from direct sunlight to preserve the warm walnut colour.

Sourced by

Sandry Law

Head of Procurement (China)

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