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Cake-wrapping cloths

Tuocha wrap pair — 28cm, stone

<i>Tuó Chá Bāo Duì</i>

沱茶包对

Two 28cm stone linen cloths, hand-printed with an iron-ink dancong sprig, sized to enfold a 100g or 250g tuocha with the quiet gravity of a well‑kept tea room.

$35USD · 110 g

Weight
110 g
Harvest
2026
Processing
Block-printed by hand using iron‑based ink on unbleached linen. Cut and hemmed to 28cm square.
Sourced by

Sourced in Yunnan’s textile lanes

Late in the spring of 2025, Michael Zhan spent a week walking the narrow alleys of a small textile quarter on the outskirts of Kunming. His brief was not tea, but the cloths that cradle it. For generations, small workshops here have printed the wrappers that protect Yunnan’s most prized pu’er cakes — and Michael was looking for a maker who still worked with iron‑based inks on unbleached linen, a combination that ages in parallel with the tea itself. What he found was a family‑run block‑printing atelier with a single iron press that dates to the 1920s. The master printer, a third‑generation artisan, keeps a small garden of dancong bushes beside the workshop; the sprig motif that appears on our cloths was drawn from one of those very shrubs. Michael worked with the printer to scale the design for both bing and tuocha wraps, ensuring the 28cm cloths could handle the smaller, thicker tuocha without excess fabric. Every cloth is printed cold with a ferrous dye that oxidises to a deep charcoal after drying, then washed once to set the ink. The result is a wrapper that isn’t merely decorative — it becomes part of the tea’s own story, darkening and softening with each use, much like the leaves it encloses.

The leaf, brewed

A textile with the tactile satisfaction of a well‑wrapped cake.

dry leaf

Untreated stone linen with a crisp, slightly nubby hand — the dancong sprig motif printed in a muted charcoal that deepens with touch.

wet leaf

After a gentle rinse, the fabric relaxes without losing structure; the ink sits flush against the flax, its ferrous undertone quietly intensified.

liquor

Visually, a balanced square of soft mineral grey, carrying a single-line botanical drawing that echoes the organic contours of a pressed tuocha.

aroma

No added scent — only the faint, clean smell of natural linen, reminiscent of a sun‑warmed tea tray after a morning session.

taste

The drape is pliant enough to fold tidily around a 100g or 250g cake, yet firm enough to hold a simple twine tie. The 28cm diagonal gives generous overlap without bulk.

finish

The cloth’s heft is modest but certain in the hand — the iron‑ink design endures through countless wrappings, acquiring a softer patina over time.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
hand-wash
Ratio
0:0
Water temp
30
0
Subsequent
line dry; do not tumble dry

Use a neutral mild detergent. Warm iron on reverse if needed. Avoid bleach and prolonged direct sun.

Sourced by

Michael Zhan

Procurement & Sourcing Specialist (China)

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