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Finest Porcelain Tea Set Relief White Magnolia on Blue Dishwasher & Freezer Safe

$ 26.39

Availability: 20 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Condition: New & Excellent. No chips or cracks. No stains.
  • Main Color: Blue,White
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Featured Refinements: Porcelain Tea Set
  • Color: White

    Description

    Fine china with relief decoration
    The magnolia petals are all relief.
    The pale blue glaze on the interior surface is extremely even, achieved only by top-notch porcelain technology.
    On the back of the tea pot, there is a poem Ode to Magnolia, written by famous painter and calligrapher Mr. Wen Zhengming.
    The set is composed of:
    1 PC * Tea pot 420 ml (15 oz)
    4 PC * tea cup 120 ml (4.2 oz)
    4 PC * tea saucer, diameter 123 mm ( 4.8")
    1 PC * Stainless Steel Infuser
    Dishwasher safe.
    Not microwave safe due to the platinum decoration.
    Freezer safe.
    Complies with FDA standard,safe for foods.
    There are no stamps on the bases.
    The Bodhisattva characteristics of china:
    Endurance.
    To turn into fine china, the ceramic materials have to go through most of the following processing steps that differ depending on the shape,required properties, and decoration of the final product: grinding, stirring, rolling, throwing, pressing, extruding, casting, drying, carving, painting, biscuit firing, cooling, glaze firing, decal firing, gold firing,etc. Normally the glaze firing temperature for fine china is as high as 1310~1400℃ (2390~2552ºF). The decal-firing temperature is usually above 800℃(1472ºF). Fine china is born from its relentlessly endurance. The sintering temperature of some ceramic products which are used for  aerospace industry can be as high as 1800℃(3272ºF).
    Non-attachment
    . High temperature firing causes very high densification and wholly impermeable. After high temperature firing, the ordinary clay turned into fine china which is comparable to jade.  It can be a plate, a tea pot, a bowl, a vase or a cup.... When a cup is used to drink coffee, tea, milk, juice or wine, it will not absorb any of them. Coffee can not make it black, milk can not make it white, juice can not make it sour or sweet, wine can not make it intoxicant or infatuated, it's in perfect stillness without attachment like a Bodhisattva.
    Permanence.
    Some ancient chinaware, they were buried in deep ocean or dark underground for hundreds or thousands of years,they are not corroded or tarnish. They are corrosion and tarnish proof as pure gold and gem diamond. Once a piece of china is made, it stays there, never convert to other substance. Just like a Bodhisattva who has attained the nirvana of no dwelling, no return to the six divisions in the wheel of karma.
    Giving.
    Fine china is made of clay, feldspar,limestone,quartz, plant ash, water,  etc., all these materials are given by the generous nature.The ingredients are always there,only waited for the human wisdom to discover the recipe to turn them into fine china. Being a gift from the nature, as well as a product of human wisdom, being the first global commodity, china has benefited myriad people, whether they are old or young, women or men, poor or rich,Easterners or Westerners. Contemporary people may not feel the benefit of chinaware as much as the people lived a few centuries ago.  As per the Pilgrim Art - the Culture of Porcelain in World History by Mr.Robert Finlay,
    in the 16th century, most people(in Europe)still used trenchers of wood and bread, as well as drinking cup made from horn and ash wood. In England, unglazed earthenware mugs replaced"black jacks",tankards made from leather coated with pitch, only in the late 16th century.
    Nowadays chinaware are very common, affordable by almost every family, thus do not make us feel benefited. This coincides with what's taught in the Vajra Sutra:
    a Bodhisattva should not dwell anywhere when he gives.