When looking up the pot on a reverse google image search it pulls up this museum page. The pots look near identical though the markings are different

  • Maoo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    To add on to what others have said, it’s a kind of clay used for artisanal pots and cups, especially teapots. It “breaks in” based on what tea you brew in it, so big tea nerds might have a puerh one separate from an oolong one. It is usually unglazed so that the porous quality that allows it to “break in” isn’t removed.

  • Joncash2@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    So what it appears to say is

    直典紫砂

    Which translates roughly to a brand name that kind of translates to perfectly straight 直典 and purple sand 紫砂. I’m guessing at the time purple sand was some kind of fancy material that made that pot more valuable? I have no idea.

    *Edit: Apparently purple sand refers to sand with Quartz in them. So, I guess it is higher quality?