M
Mia 1 S. Parcel arrived safely. The craftsmanship is superb and the design stays beautifully elegant. Highly recommend for any tea lover.
A pair of Qing Dynasty blue-and-white porcelain plates from Dehua, shaped by craft, trade, and time. Dehua porcelain, known in the West as 'Blanc de Chine', was the cornerstone of global trade in the 17th-19th centuries. Once part of the Maritime Silk Road that departed from Quanzhou, plates like these traveled toward Europe and the Americas. Some arrived. Some were lost to the sea.
These two were discovered in an antique market—quiet survivors of that long, uncertain passage.
Notice the unhurried lines—not the pride of an artist, but the steady hand of a craftsman repeating a lineage.
They are not museum relics. They are objects meant to be lived with.
Calm, Narrative, Slightly Salted by Time
There is a quiet storytelling quality in these plates. The hand-painted figures are expressive without being dramatic, their gestures simple, human, and grounded. You can feel the rhythm of the brush rather than the ambition of an “artist.”
Qing-era Dehua craftsmen did not paint to impress. They followed methods passed down by their masters, line by line. Yet in doing so, they unintentionally echoed the layered ink techniques of traditional Chinese painting—depth appearing where none was consciously designed.
When used on a tea table, especially in dry-style Gongfu tea, the plates naturally draw the eye. They become a silent stage for the teapot, anchoring the entire setting without overwhelming it.
Subtle kiln spots or gentle wear on the foot-rim are the 'sea salt' of time—marking their survival through centuries.
These plates remind me that history doesn’t always announce itself.
Sometimes it sits quietly under a teapot, holding space while the tea is poured.
How you choose to use them—on the table or on the wall—is already part of their next chapter.