Posted 2 months ago
kwqd
(1186 items)
This cup is about 3.25" high x 3" top diameter. It is densely hand decorated and signed on the bottom. The condition suggests it is not very old, but I seldom see this level of hand decoration on modern Japanese pottery. There are six medallions painted around the cup. I neglected to get images of the three smaller ones, but will add them when I get a chance.
I have been keeping my eye out for very inexpensive, very meticulously hand painted Japanese yunomi, preferably unsigned. I made an exception for this one as it it met the first two criteria though it is signed. The point of looking for simple, anonymous cups is partially an homage to mingei ware, but this cup turned out to be the least expensive cup I could find. Pretty amazing. This cup misses completely several criteria for mingei ware, not simple, not easily produced in large quantities, not anonymous, etc. Fancy, actually, but too good to pass up.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mingei
I haven't tried to identify the maker, but will update the description if I figure it out.
I did stumble across the two footed sake cups I was looking for, but they turned out be by Koransha's sister kiln, Fukagawa. I will post them by and by. They are quite fancy and came with a ton of documentation.
Thanks, Kevin and vynil33rpm!
Thank you, dav2no1, fortapache, mikelv85, Jenni and Reise!
Thanks for checking out my cup, Drake47 and vcal!
Thanks for checking out my cup, Blammoammo!
Thank you, mp.kunst!
Thanks for the cup luv, Leelani, GianaMZ and Bronmar!
Thank you, BHIFOS, Blammoammo, jbingham95 and JJansen!
Not an expert on these, but it looks like a Japanese Sometsuke Noodle Bowl. Try Choko Kanji as the designer.
Thanks for the input, jmillermugs! Dimensions and shape are not right for a noodle bowl. The top is flared out quite a bit on this cup, somewhat distorting the dimensions.
Kanji is a Japanese writing style, so choko kanji is basically a way of saying a cup with writing on it, not the name of a designer.
That being said, the size of Japanese tea cups, yunomi, and some sake cups, ochoko/choko, are very close to those of some noodle cups and could be used that way and vise versa. Noodle cups typically have straight, not flared sides, though I have seen noodle cups that have flared tops.
The cup in this post is classically a yunomi.
Then we have chawanmushi cups..... Very confusing...
i wonder is it actually possible to buy chawanmushi cups without a futa ?
wow that,s is a good remark of kwqd even the shapes and the rim is intertwining, i just don,t know
Lids are often lost. Times have changed since the Japanese had specialized shapes in cooking/serving utensils for every purpose so I find it difficult to distinguish purpose based on shape with newer pieces. Lack of a lid is not a smoking gun...
Chawanmushi basically means egg custard steamed in a tea bowl or cup but seems always to be associated only with cups with lids. I do find cups that are definitely for chawanmushi usually tend to be thicker and straight walled. Not sure if that was/is always the case.
Chawanmushi basically means egg custard steamed in a tea bowl or cup but seems always to be associated only with cups with lids.
no i did not , i did extensive research but i just don,t know
Japanese pottery for food use is a very complex topic....