Filigree pure silver pot with "Boundless Blessings and Prosperity" in Jugun Zhu style.
The Chinese people love tea, and naturally they cannot lack love and research for tea utensils. In the forging of modern tea wares, there often exists peak creations that draw inspiration from traditional fine gold and silver handicrafts. For example, Mongolian inlay and gold-chasing craftsmanship: Drawing inspiration from the craftsmanship of Mongolian women's headdresses, it not only has complicated carving techniques but also requires gem inlaying and the braiding and inlaying skills of gold, silver, and copper wires. Artists form a set of comprehensive processing techniques through hammering, chasing, filigree weaving, and gem inlaying on metals, commonly known as Mongolian inlay art. Another example is the forged hammered pattern craftsmanship: A decorative technique between texture and pattern, created by hand hammering without forming a specific image. It has many mimetic forms, such as barren and cracked land, like waves, like cracked bark, like a clear stream in the mountains.