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Floor seating

Zabuton floor mat — stone

座布団

A thick cotton-batting mat in stone-grey linen — the quiet foundation for kneeling or cross-legged tea sessions.

Free · paid shipping only

Weight
2800 g
Processing
Layered cotton-batting wrapped in stone-dyed linen, edge-stitched twice
Sourced by

Sourced from a Yunnan workshop by Sandry Law

Sandry Law first came across these zabuton mats in a small Dali workshop tucked behind the morning market. The maker — a third-generation cotton-batting family — still uses a hand-carding method passed down from the Bai people. Their mat layers are built with raw cotton from the valleys around Erhai, compressed slowly to avoid lumps, then wrapped in a linen cover woven with mineral-dyed threads. The stone colour here is achieved with a wash of local grey clay, fixed with a mild iron mordant, so each mat varies slightly in tone.

Sandry was there during the demonstration: the stitcher pulled a linen shell over a cloud of cotton, folded the edges twice, and ran a tight line of stitches — no piping, no synthetic filler. He ordered a first batch for tea.furniture that same afternoon. The mats now come from the same workshop, with the same maker overseeing every piece. They’re designed to last a lifetime of kneeling sessions, and they settle into a tea room without shouting — the highest compliment a floor mat can receive.

The leaf, brewed

A quiet, grounded presence underfoot

dry leaf

Crisp, cool surface — the linen’s irregular stone-grey weave recalls unglazed clay. Mild raw-cotton scent from the batting.

wet leaf

After a session, the fibers relax slightly, holding a gentle impression of warmth without flattening.

liquor

The colour deepens in low light, a calm neutral that absorbs tea-room shadows.

aroma

Clean linen, faint rice-straw note from the inner batting — no synthetic tang.

taste

Firm yet forgiving under knee or shin; an invitation to settle into stillness.

finish

Even pressure distribution, no cold spots — just grounded, supportive ease that lingers through multiple infusions.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
Kneeling (seiza) or cross-legged — pair with a zafu for hip lift
Ratio
One mat per sitter; size 70×70 cm
Water temp
Hand wash cold, max 30°C, mild soap only
First infusion
Air dry flat, avoid direct sun to preserve stone hue
Subsequent
Spot clean with damp cloth; rotate monthly for even wear

Natural linen softens with age. Store flat and away from damp — the cotton batting breathes best in dry air.

Sourced by

Sandry Law

Head of Procurement (China)

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