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Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: May 18th, 2015, 11:30 pm
by Haydenmc
Oh man, hope you've got a nice tree or a really nice shelf to put that Souin on. Spectacular.

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: May 19th, 2015, 8:19 am
by JaseH
wrcmad wrote:Pics of my 3 favourites, all tokonames:
:clap: ..very nice!

Love the look of that Souin.

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: July 8th, 2015, 8:40 pm
by wrcmad
Nabbed this one in Japan recently.
It made me weak at the knees. It also made my wallet bleed. :palm: ......
A fairly rare Koyo "feathered" (so the translation goes?) oribe - 38 x 27 x 14cm.
I think it's a keeper.
koyo1a.jpg
koyo2a.jpg
koyo7.jpg
koyo4a.jpg

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: July 8th, 2015, 9:55 pm
by bodhidharma
Now...that is a stunning pot. I will give you my second born for it :fc:

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: July 8th, 2015, 10:13 pm
by JaseH
That is nice! Koyo glazes are special, this one is no exception! An unusual shape too.

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Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: July 8th, 2015, 10:40 pm
by kcpoole
Very pretty

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Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: July 8th, 2015, 10:44 pm
by Jarad
:o wow! That's an awesome pot!

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: September 9th, 2015, 4:03 pm
by wrcmad
Got my hands on this one recently - Koshousen Yamaaki, 30+ years old.
IMG_4468b.jpg

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: September 9th, 2015, 7:15 pm
by JaseH
That's pretty special, got that feel of a hand built pot, not press moulded. Do you know?

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Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: September 9th, 2015, 7:56 pm
by wrcmad
Definitely hand-made (all good Toko's are) - you can see where they have been shaped and worked on - each one slightly unique.
The majority use the slab-building method inside a mould, then hand-finish the detail.
Lindsay Farr covered the Yamaaki factory, where this one was born:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlDjHsASvuE
JaseH wrote:That's pretty special, got that feel of a hand built pot, not press moulded. Do you know?

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Japanese pots & potters

Posted: September 10th, 2015, 7:45 am
by Elmar
Nice score.
I'm still working on the "growing" phase of my learning but can see a definite interest growing within me about pots!
But, I gots to move carefully lest my old brainz gets all befuddled...


Cheers
Elmar

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: September 10th, 2015, 8:16 am
by JaseH
wrcmad wrote: Lindsay Farr covered the Yamaaki factory, where this one was born:
Yep, I've visited the Yamaaki factory :tu2: pity they are no longer in production :(

That example looks like it has had more hand finishing than most, if not totally hand built(without using a press mould) - a really nice pot!

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: January 11th, 2016, 10:35 pm
by wrcmad
If you spend enough time looking, every now and then you will stumble across a real bargain.
A couple of months ago, I procured a pot in Japan.
I was browsing a market, and something caught my eye - it was an unloved, dusty, ugly little pot that had been relegated to the far back corner of the table, and that didn't garner even a second glance by passers by.
However, the cut corners and feet on this one looked a little familiar?
I picked it up. Very solid, well-made pot, with an unusual blistered glaze, and obvious age. No chips or scratches either.
tofukuji1.jpg
However, it was very cheap, so it couldn't be.
Ahh, what the heck, I had it in my hand now, so with empty hope, and a bit of anticipation, I flipped it.... :o
tofukuji2.jpg
And it was! .... a first generation Tofukuji! :tu:
I always wanted one of these in my collection, and this one was priced cheaper than a slab of beer.
I felt a little guilty buying it so cheaply, so to make it up to the vendor, I bought it's cousin too. :whistle:
tofukuji3.jpg

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: March 12th, 2016, 10:36 am
by Cutymit
Hi Jaseh
It is interesting to read your blog about Japanese bonsai pots & your Japan visit. We plan to go to Japan later this year and plan to pick up a few quality pots. Did you buy your Koyo oribe at
Tokoname kiln? We stay in Tokyo , ciuld we make a day trip to Tokoname? Could you give us some advice if we can find good quality pots near Tokyo?
Many Thanks
Cutymit

Re: Japanese pots & potters

Posted: March 15th, 2016, 1:08 pm
by JaseH
Cutymit wrote:Hi Jaseh
It is interesting to read your blog about Japanese bonsai pots & your Japan visit. We plan to go to Japan later this year and plan to pick up a few quality pots. Did you buy your Koyo oribe at
Tokoname kiln? We stay in Tokyo , ciuld we make a day trip to Tokoname? Could you give us some advice if we can find good quality pots near Tokyo?
Many Thanks
Cutymit
Hi Cutymit - very sorry for the late reply, I haven't much time to get on the forum lately!

Yes I purchased that Koyo Oribe from the kiln in Tokoname. If you are able to, I would try and visit Tokoname and contact Takeyoshi who may be able to guide you to a few kilns, I can message you his email address if you like.

I'm not that knowledgeable of Tokyo itself, when I was there it was when Kokufu Ten was on, so the Green Club market in Ueno was the place to be for buying pots. Otherwise any of the well known bonsai nurseries generally have collections of pots stacked under the benches. Shunkaen is in Tokyo, Kobayashi has expensive tastes in pots though! Omiya is well worth getting to if you can, you are sure to find some there as well at all the various nurseries.