From Yunnan’s red earth to the global supply chain
Sandry Law did not start his career in tea — he began on the logistics floors of agricultural cooperatives, watching the careful dance of harvests, grading, and contract fulfillment. A stint in a Kunming-based fair-trade textile program introduced him to the delicate art of sourcing: where fibre quality, ethical labour, and regional identity converge. That convergence became his compass.
When he joined Teamotea in its early years, Sandry was tasked with establishing a direct-procurement network for not just leaf, but the physical culture that surrounds tea — ceramics, cloth, paper, and later, apparel. His base in Kunming placed him at the nerve centre of Yunnan’s raw material flows: organic cotton from the foothills of the Wuliang Mountains, hand-woven linen from Dali, and the rich dye traditions of the Bai and Dai communities. He built a vetting system that treats every bolt of fabric with the same rigour as a lot of Pu’er.
Sandry’s most celebrated contribution is the Petersburg print workshop partnership — a relationship he cultivated across three years of visits, sample exchanges, and deep-dive discussions about ink opacity, fabric memory, and screen mesh tension. The result is a line of gongfu aprons and seasonal tees that feel as considered as a well-stored cake of tea. His quality-control benchmarks are legendary in Kunming: colourfastness tested under Yunnan’s high-UV sun, seam strength checked with a tea-picker’s load in mind, and a personal rule that every product must survive a monsoon-season washing line.
Mentored by Zhou Xiang (whose unflinching attention to varietal detail Sandry admires) and the late-season buying trips with Fang Ting in Henan, Sandry learned to marry aesthetic demand with farm-level reality. He now leads a small team of sourcing specialists, regularly visiting Yiwu, Jinggu, and Menghai — not just for tea, but for the other harvests that clothe the tea community. His quiet mantra: “You can taste provenance, and you can wear it.”
The Yiwu run — a textile memoir of ancient tea forests
When tea.style decided to produce the ‘Tour 2026 spring tee — Yiwu run’, Sandry returned to a region he knew intimately. Yiwu (Yìwǔ), an ancient tea mountain in southern Yunnan, holds some of the oldest cultivated tea tree groves, where the myth of wild Shēng Pu’er was born. But beyond the tea, Yiwu is also home to smallholder cotton plots intercropped with forest canopy — a system Sandry has spent years mapping for ethical procurement.
The tee’s organic cotton is spun from those plots, hand-picked by the same communities that harvest tea leaves. Sandry worked directly with a women-led co-op in a Yiwu highland village to secure a consistent fibre length and a natural cream base that holds the print with depth. The garment then travels to the Petersburg workshop, where the screen print — a topographical abstraction of Yiwu’s famous Guoyoulin forest — is applied using water-based, heavy-metal-free inks. For Sandry, it’s a closed loop: the wearer of the tee carries a piece of Yiwu’s soil memory, filtered through a supply chain that respects both the leaf and the fabric.