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From the Kiln to Your Cup: Jingdezhen's 1,000-Year Legacy of Handcrafted Porcelain

Jun 26,2026 | TeaTsy Team

 

Lake Veil Jingdezhen stoneware tea set lifestyle background

Craft · Heritage · Ritual

From the Kiln to Your Cup:
Jingdezhen's 1,000-Year Legacy of Handcrafted Porcelain

How a small city in Jiangxi turned clay and fire into the world's most revered ceramic tradition — and how that tradition lives in every piece of the Lake Veil collection.

By TeaTsy · June 26, 2026 · 8 min read

The City That Built the World's China

Nestled in the forested mountains of northeastern Jiangxi Province, Jingdezhen (景德鎮) has been producing ceramic ware for more than 1,700 years. By the Song Dynasty (960–1279 CE), its kilns were already supplying the imperial court. In 1004 CE, Emperor Zhenzong granted the city his reign-era name — Jingde — and ordered every piece of imperial porcelain to bear the inscription "Made in Jingde" on its base. A tradition, and a city's identity, were sealed.

Aerial view of Jingdezhen city at dusk — ancient ceramic kilns glowing against the night sky, the Porcelain Capital of the World
Jingdezhen (景德鎮) at dusk — over a thousand kilns have glowed in these hills for more than 1,700 years, earning the city its enduring title as the Porcelain Capital of the World.

The complete Lake Veil collection — each piece hand-thrown in Jingdezhen and fired above 1,330°C.

Lake Veil handmade Jingdezhen stoneware tea set arranged on a tea table — teapot, gaiwan, fair cups and tea cups
The complete Lake Veil collection — each piece hand-thrown in Jingdezhen and fired above 1,330°C.

During the Ming and Qing dynasties, Jingdezhen reached the apex of its influence. The city's famous imperial kilns (御窑, Yù Yáo) produced the cobalt-blue-and-white porcelain that sailed aboard Dutch East India Company ships to Europe, where it ignited a mania collectors called chinoiserie. Kings paid fortunes for it. Potters spent lifetimes replicating it. No city on earth has shaped the Western dining table — or the Eastern tea ceremony — quite like Jingdezhen.

Lake Veil Jingdezhen stoneware tea set — teapot, gaiwan, fair cups and tea cups arranged on a tea table
The Lake Veil collection in a complete setting — every vessel hand-thrown on the wheel, glazed by hand, and fired in a single high-temperature kiln above 1,330°C.
"Jingdezhen: where a thousand kilns glow at night, and a hundred boats carry porcelain by dawn."
— Tang-era verse describing the city at its peak

Today, Jingdezhen's 1.6 million residents still live and breathe ceramics. The city is home to hundreds of independent studios, the legendary Ceramic University of China, and a new generation of artisans who fuse ancient kiln techniques with contemporary design sensibilities. It remains, without question, the Porcelain Capital of the World.

Why Jingdezhen? The Secret Beneath the Mountains

Great ceramics begin with exceptional raw materials, and Jingdezhen sits atop one of the most remarkable geological formations on earth. The surrounding Gaoling (高嶺) hills are rich in kaolin — the pure white clay that gives porcelain its name in almost every European language (from Portuguese pó de Gaoling, "powder of Gaoling"). Kaolin fires to a translucent, glass-like density that common earthenware cannot achieve.

Close-up detail of hand-brushed blue-green kiln-change glaze on Lake Veil Jingdezhen stoneware — star-speckled texture and gradient
The reactive glaze under close inspection: iron migration creates the gradient; silica devitrification forms the star-speckled oilspot texture. No two pieces share the same pattern.

For the kiln-change stoneware in the Lake Veil series, artisans blend local kaolin with iron-rich secondary clays. This combination creates a body that holds heat evenly, rings true when tapped, and develops a subtly textured surface — the ideal canvas for a reactive glaze that transforms unpredictably in the fire.

Lake Veil stoneware tea cups and gaiwan arranged on a wood surface — showing variation in kiln-change glaze across individual pieces
Variation within the series: even pieces from the same kiln firing carry subtle differences in colour gradient and texture — a natural consequence of the kiln-change process.
Lake Veil Straight Sided Tea Cup showing the hand-brushed blue-green kiln-change gradient glaze
Straight Sided Tea Cup — the kiln-change gradient shifts from misty white to deep teal.
Lake Veil Gourd Tea Cup with waist-cinched silhouette and layered gradient glaze
Gourd Tea Cup — the waist-cinched silhouette provides natural heat insulation.

The Art of Hand-Throwing: Where Muscle Memory Meets Meditation

Walk through Jingdezhen's ceramic district today and you will hear, before you see, the workshops: the rhythmic slap of clay on a wheel, the low hum of the kick-wheel's flywheel, the soft scrape of a bamboo rib shaping a wall. Hand-throwing (拉坯, Lā Pēi) is the foundational skill of Jingdezhen craftsmanship, and it takes a master potter a decade of daily practice to execute it consistently.

Unlike industrial casting — where liquid slip is poured into plaster moulds and every piece is identical — hand-throwing is an act of negotiation between the potter's hands and the clay's own personality. The wheel spins; the potter centres the clay with cupped palms, opens the base with pressing thumbs, and draws the walls upward with fingertip pressure from within and without. A slight variation in speed, humidity, or hand pressure produces a unique contour. No two hand-thrown pieces share exactly the same wall thickness, rim profile, or foot ring.

Lake Veil Classic Gaiwan showing the hand-thrown form and layered glaze detail — Jingdezhen stoneware
The Lake Veil Classic Gaiwan — the flared rim is shaped entirely by the potter's fingertips, providing a natural heat buffer during pouring.
What "hand-thrown" really means for your tea The gentle variation in wall thickness means heat dissipates unevenly — which is, paradoxically, a feature. Your fingers find the cooler spots naturally, allowing a comfortable grip even when the liquid inside is piping hot. The organic rim, slightly undulating rather than machine-perfect, seals gently against your lips for a more intimate sip.

For pieces like a gaiwan or a straight-sided tea cup, the margin for error is measured in millimetres. Too thick, and the piece feels clunky and retains too much heat. Too thin, and it cracks during high-temperature firing. Experienced Jingdezhen throwers calibrate this by touch alone, eyes half-closed, reading the clay through their palms.

Kiln Change (窯變): The Magic That Cannot Be Commanded

Of all Jingdezhen's many glaze traditions, none is more revered — or more mysterious — than kiln change (窯變, Yáo Biàn). The concept is ancient: a glaze enters the kiln one colour and emerges as something entirely different, transformed by the chemistry of heat, flame, and atmosphere in ways no potter can fully predict or control.

The legendary Jun Kiln of the Song Dynasty first perfected this art, creating vessels with blue-purple glazes that shimmered like northern skies. Song court poets celebrated the effect with the phrase "一色入窑,万彩出窑" — "one colour into the kiln, ten thousand colours out."

Lake Veil tea cup group shot showing blue-green kiln-change glaze variation
Each cup unique
Lake Veil tea set detail shot — multiple pieces showing complementary glaze tones
Complementary tones
Lake Veil stoneware collection flat lay — full tea ceremony set
No two alike

The Science Behind the Magic

Modern ceramic science has partly decoded kiln change, though it has not diminished its wonder. The reactive glazes used on the Lake Veil series contain iron oxide and copper compounds suspended in a silica matrix. During firing above 1,330°C, several reactions happen simultaneously:

  • Copper reduction: When the kiln atmosphere is oxygen-poor, copper oxide converts to cuprous oxide, producing greens and turquoises. When oxygen-rich pockets develop, it shifts toward red. Both can appear on the same piece.
  • Iron migration: Iron compounds in the glaze are mobile at high temperatures and flow downward under gravity, creating streaks and gradients.
  • Silica devitrification: Tiny crystals nucleate within the glaze as it cools, producing the star-speckled "oilspot" texture that shifts colour in different light.
  • Clay-glaze interaction: Where the glaze thins at the rim and foot, the clay body's minerals bleed through, creating halos and natural edges.

The combined result — a dreamy blue-green gradient that fades into warm earth at the base, dotted with iridescent specks — is entirely unique on every piece. No two Lake Veil cups will ever look the same. This is not marketing language. It is kiln physics.

From Mountain Clay to Your Tea Table: 12 Handcrafted Steps

Lake Veil Handheld Gaiwan — side spout design allows one-handed pouring, Jingdezhen stoneware
The Handheld Gaiwan — gaiwan and teapot in a single hand-thrown vessel. Side-spout design for one-handed pouring.

Each piece in the Lake Veil series passes through more than a dozen distinct handwork stages before it reaches you. Mechanised production skips most of these; Jingdezhen master-craft skips none.

1

Clay selection & blending — Local kaolin is mixed with iron-bearing secondary clays and aged for weeks to improve plasticity.

2

Wedging — The clay mass is kneaded by hand to eliminate air pockets that would cause the piece to explode in the kiln.

3

Centring — The clay is thrown onto a spinning wheel and centred with cupped palms — the most skill-intensive step.

4

Opening & throwing — The walls are drawn upward and shaped into the specific silhouette of each vessel form.

5

Rim finishing — The rim is hand-pinched to create the organic, subtly octagonal texture unique to this series.

6

Wire cutting & drying — The piece is cut from the bat and dried slowly for 1–3 days to prevent warping.

7

Trimming (foot ring) — The leather-hard piece is returned to the wheel and the base is trimmed to a precise foot ring.

8

Bisque firing — A first firing at ~900°C solidifies the clay body without vitrifying it, making it ready for glaze.

9

Glaze preparation — The reactive glaze is mixed in precise ratios; small batch variations affect the final colour outcome.

10

Glaze application — Glaze is hand-brushed in layered coats, building up thickness that will flow and blend in the fire.

11

High-temperature firing — The kiln rises above 1,330°C over several hours. Atmosphere is actively managed to coax the glaze transformation.

12

Quality inspection — Pieces are examined for form, glaze integrity, and ring tone. Only those that pass are shipped.

 

Shop the Lake Veil Collection

Every piece hand-thrown in Jingdezhen. No two are identical. Fired above 1,330°C.

Lake Veil Hand-Thrown Jingdezhen Stoneware Straight Sided Tea Cup with blue-green kiln-change glaze Best Seller

Lake Veil · Tea Cup

Straight Sided Tea Cup

Hand-thrown with a slightly flared straight body — stackable, versatile, and perfect for daily brewing. The hand-pinched octagonal rim settles naturally against your lips.

Lake Veil Hand-Thrown Jingdezhen Stoneware Gourd Tea Cup with waist-cinched silhouette

Lake Veil · Tea Cup

Gourd Tea Cup

The iconic waist-cinched silhouette provides natural heat insulation and a secure grip — a classic form that has endured for centuries for very good reasons.

Lake Veil Hand-Thrown Jingdezhen Stoneware Classic Gaiwan with flared rim and gradient glaze Most Versatile

Lake Veil · Gaiwan

Classic Gaiwan

The workhorse of the Chinese tea ceremony. The thoughtfully flared rim ensures a heat-buffered, comfortable pour through a dozen infusions.

Lake Veil Hand-Thrown Jingdezhen Stoneware Handheld Gaiwan with side spout design 2-in-1

Lake Veil · Gaiwan

Handheld Gaiwan

Side-spout design for effortless one-handed pouring — gaiwan and teapot in a single vessel. Streamlined form made for those who want ritual without complexity.

Lake Veil Hand-Thrown Jingdezhen Stoneware Wide Rim Fair Cup (Gongdaobei) with broad bowl shape

Lake Veil · Fair Cup 公道杯

Wide Rim Fair Cup

Broad bowl shape designed for rapid cooling and generous pouring — the fairest way to share tea evenly among guests, with a wide surface that lets aroma bloom.

Lake Veil Hand-Thrown Jingdezhen Stoneware Conical Fair Cup for aroma retention

Lake Veil · Fair Cup 公道杯

Conical Fair Cup

Tall and tapered for superior aroma concentration and a precise, controlled pour. Ideal for high-grown oolongs and aged puer where every aromatic note matters.

Lake Veil Hand-Thrown Jingdezhen Stoneware Horizontal Teapot with ergonomic handle Centerpiece

Lake Veil · Teapot

Horizontal Teapot

Ergonomically positioned handle for confident, balanced pouring. A vessel built for the unhurried ritual of multiple slow infusions — precision-poured, mindfully calm.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Jingdezhen porcelain different from other Chinese ceramics?Jingdezhen sits on deposits of high-purity kaolin clay and has uninterrupted kiln traditions dating back over 1,700 years. Its imperial kiln legacy, specialist craft guilds, and ultra-high firing temperatures produce ceramics with a translucency, ring tone, and glaze complexity not found elsewhere in China.
What is kiln change (窯變 / yáo biàn) glaze?Kiln change refers to the unpredictable transformation a glaze undergoes inside the kiln due to temperature, atmosphere, and chemical reactions between glaze and clay. Iron and copper compounds flow, reduce, and crystallise in ways no potter can fully control — producing unique gradients, oilspot textures, and colour shifts on every single piece.
Is the Lake Veil series safe for daily use?Yes. All Lake Veil pieces are fired above 1,330°C, vitrifying the clay body completely and making it non-porous, food-safe, and dishwasher-friendly. The reactive glaze is lead-free and cadmium-free.
Will my piece look exactly like the photo?No — and that is the point. Because each piece is hand-thrown and fired individually, the glaze gradient, speckling pattern, and colour tones will differ from both the photos and every other piece ever made. You receive something genuinely one-of-a-kind.
How do I care for hand-thrown stoneware?Lake Veil stoneware is dishwasher-safe, but hand-washing with warm water and mild soap preserves the glaze's lustre longest. Avoid sudden thermal shock. The pieces can be seasoned by simmering in plain water for 20 minutes before first use.
Which teas suit the Lake Veil series best?The neutral, non-porous stoneware body does not impart flavour, making it suitable for any tea. The thermal mass of the walls performs particularly well with oolongs, white teas, and aged puer — holding temperature steady across multiple short infusions.
Lake Veil full Jingdezhen tea set styled on a tea tray — teapot, gaiwan, fair cups and tea cups in use
The Lake Veil collection in a complete tea setting — hand-thrown in Jingdezhen, designed for a lifetime of daily ritual.

 

Begin Your Ritual.

Every Lake Veil piece is hand-thrown in Jingdezhen, glazed by hand, and fired once above 1,330°C. No moulds. No duplicates. Just the quiet permanence of fire and clay.

Shop the Lake Veil Collection →

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