From Kunming market mornings to a working sommelier’s shoulder.
Sandry Law, Head of Procurement, has spent years moving through Yunnan’s tea markets before dawn — hands full, bags spiraling, always wishing for a single pack that understood the sommelier’s rhythm. Sketching on the back of vendor invoices, he designed a knapsack that would work as hard as the tea he sources. The canvas is woven at a family-run mill outside Dali; the leather is vegetable-tanned in a Kunming atelier specializing in field goods. The internal divider pattern was refined after watching mobile tea vendors pack their wares with military precision — one compartment for a kettle, one for a gaiwan, no wasted motion. The padded gaiwan pocket is sized for a standard 100 ml vessel, and the exterior thermos slot fits a 500 ml flask. Before any bag leaves the warehouse, Sandry inspects every stitch on the divider — a quality gate borrowed from his lot-assessment routine. After a day spent under the sun, the canvas will smell faintly of earth and dried leaves, a reminder of the morning markets that inspired it.