The Ming Ching Club
From exotic wines to rare antique furniture, the Ming Ching Club is a classy, quirky ensemble of hand-picked bits & bobs from around the World.
17/01/2017
Food trends may come and go but cast iron teapots are forever 😍 Tetsubins are Japanese cast iron teapots that are estimated to have been around since the 17th Century. Apparently they rose in popularity to replace Chinese teapots as the literati adopted sencha drinking as a symbol of revolution against the ruling class.
This particular tetsubin was given to Emily by her daughter, Ashley for her 50th birthday. It was imported from Japan and has bamboo leaf motifs on it, which she has always been fond of.
The good thing about tetsubins is that they keep water warmer for longer than porcelain or glass teapots.
More about tetsubins here:
http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/anthropology/tetsubin/hist.html
📷: Billy Simon
03/01/2017
Booze is not all that we're obsessed with!
The matriarch of the Ming Ching Club, Emily, has an eye for Oriental furniture. Case in point: this Chinese chest Em bought in KL about 5 years ago with the original maker's stamp still attached!
The maker's stamp says that it is from a shop on Ximen Street, Yangdong, in the Yangjiang prefecture of Guangdong. The shop owner said the chest was made some time between the 1920s and 1950s and belonged to the venerable Chinese "mah jie"s, also from Guangdong. Mah Jie's were ladies who took vows of chastity and spinsterhood after hearing tales from their married friends of unloving marriages and unkind mother-in-laws. These mah jie's were special as they were a select group of women who had a choice in marriage - they were financially independent from men thanks to their silk-making jobs. Just before the Japanese invasion, the silk industry began to decline and many of these silk makers left China and migrated to Malaysia, Hong Kong or Singapore. They were identified by the black and white uniforms they donned while working as domestic servants and keeping their vow of chastity and spinsterhood. Mah Jie's have since become a thing of the past, but their legacy lives on in this chest.
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10188 Jalan Ming Ching
Kuching
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