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Cha pao & ceremonial robes — Overshirt

Ceremony overshirt — charcoal, medium

Loose-cut, hand-stitched overshirt in hard-wearing charcoal cotton-linen, cut for effortless ceremony service — weightless, grounded, unstudied.

$216USD · 420 g

Weight
420 g
Harvest
Autumn/Winter 2025
Cultivar
cotton-linen blend
Processing
hand-stitched, garment-dyed with charcoal pigment, washed for softness
Sourced by

from Chaozhou stitch to everyday ceremony

Sandry Law first saw this silhouette in a small courtyard outside Kunming — a tea farmer in a hand-stitched cha pao (chá páo 茶袍), sleeves rolled, quietly pouring sheng. The cut was generous, unbroken by shoulder seams, the fabric long-softened by wear. It was a working robe, not a costume.

When tea.style began exploring ceremony apparel, Sandry returned to that memory. He located a modest atelier in the Lancang river valley, a family of tailors who had stitched loose jackets for tea communities for three generations. Their cotton-linen blend comes from a small plot where the soil still holds traces of ancient trade routes; it’s woven on narrow looms to preserve a slight irregularity. The charcoal pigment is derived from fermented tea-waste — a zero-waste dye that deepens with each wash.

Each overshirt takes three days to stitch. The front closes with a single knot button, the sleeves are free, the body falls without resistance. It’s cut for movement: raising a kettle, sweeping a table, offering a cup. Sandry commissioned a limited run of 60 pieces in charcoal, each stamped with the atelier’s mark inside the back collar. Wear it for ceremony, for morning tea, for the long day that follows.

The leaf, brewed

a drape that breathes — understated, grounding

dry leaf

Fabric hand dry and crisp, a slight slub running through the weave; the charcoal dye a deep, matte absorption of light.

wet leaf

After a wash the fabric softens to a gentle, lived-in hand; seams settle smoothly without puckering.

liquor

The overshirt hangs with quiet gravity; the cut floats off the body, revealing the silhouette’s ease.

aroma

Faint scent of natural indigo and sun-dried cotton — earthy, clean, a trace of the workshop.

taste

Comfort in motion: sleeve rolls easily, collar frames the neck without constriction, deep pockets rest weightlessly.

finish

With wear, charcoal retains its depth, aging into a personal patina at elbows and cuffs — a garment that softens without fading.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
machine wash cold, gentle cycle
Water temp
30
0
Subsequent
lay flat to dry; iron on low if needed

Dye is pigment-rich; wash separately for first few cycles to preserve charcoal depth. Do not bleach.

Sourced by

Sandry Law

Head of Procurement (China)

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