Chikueido Takayama Chasen (80 Tines 八十本立)

$45.00
sold out

A 100% hand-crafted white bamboo Chasen Matcha whisk (八十本立 茶筅) from the most traditional Chasen terroir, Takayama, Ikoma City in Japan. Carved by Kuboさん and certified by the Japanese government for tea ceremonies for the Urasenke school, this 80-tine Chasen is perfect for daily use in making a smooth bowl of Matcha.

Material: White Bamboo

Tines: 80 tines for Usucha or Koicha

Artisan: Chikueido 竹栄堂

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A 100% hand-crafted white bamboo Chasen Matcha whisk (八十本立 茶筅) from the most traditional Chasen terroir, Takayama, Ikoma City in Japan. Carved by Kuboさん and certified by the Japanese government for tea ceremonies for the Urasenke school, this 80-tine Chasen is perfect for daily use in making a smooth bowl of Matcha.

Material: White Bamboo

Tines: 80 tines for Usucha or Koicha

Artisan: Chikueido 竹栄堂

About This Chasen

Certified for ceremonial use by the Japanese government. This white bamboo Matcha whisk is 100% hand-crafted from a single piece of natural and locally grown bamboo in the most renowned Chasen crafting region: Takayama village in Nara City, Japan.

Each Chasen is painstakingly carved, by hand, through 8 or more laborious steps, taking half a day to finish just one. Japanese Chasens are light with flexible tines that make them more durable when whisking.

This Chasen has 80 tines, which makes it appropriate for making a foamy and silky bowl of Usucha without being too difficult to hold with one’s hand. The number of tines is also low enough to make a bowl of Koicha without the excess risk of the tines breaking.

Teaware Notes

Category

Aganoyaki (上野焼)

Artisan

Chikueido 竹栄堂

Terrior

Takayama, Ikoma City

Tines

80 Tines

Material

White Bamboo

Use

Certified for Tea Ceremony

 

Kuboさん

“Only Matcha made with Takayama Ikoma Chasen is Matcha, Kuboさん remarked to me.”

He continued, “Only fifty years ago, there were fifty Chasen makers in Takayama. Today there are less than 20.”

 

Takayama, Ikoma: The Home of the Chasen

Chasen is very different from other tea tools. With Chawan, older is better. But with Chasen, newer is better.

Chasen is like fresh fish, it has a shelf life. Even if you don’t use it, it will degrade.

With Chasen, the maker's name is important because the tool itself does not have its own poetic name.

Map of Uji Japan