Racing through the waves with full-hearted passion.
Chasing the connections that stretch across all seas.
Sharing together the boundless, full-hearted generosity of the open horizon.
— Heinrich Wang
6)FAQ
Q1: Why is By the Measure of the Sea called "the first pot" of NewChi Porcelain?
A: By the Measure of the Sea was the first piece Heinrich Wang successfully fired with the design language that defines NewChi Porcelain — sharp edges, flat surfaces, a straight suspended handle, an asymmetrical body. Before this piece existed, every factory Wang approached said these forms were impossible to produce in high-temperature porcelain: the 15% shrinkage rate during firing meant that any straight line would deflect, any flat surface would warp, any suspended form would bend. Three years of development and visits to over a hundred factories preceded the first successful firing. "First pot" means the first proof that it could be done — and the piece that gave every subsequent NewChi design its foundation.
Q2: Is this set for tea or coffee?
A: Both — by design. The set includes a sugar bowl and creamer alongside the teapot, cup, and saucer, making it equally suited to Western coffee service and Eastern tea ceremony. Heinrich Wang designed By the Measure of the Sea around the concept of hǎiliàng — the generosity of the sea, which receives everything without preference. Tea or coffee, milk or no milk, Eastern or Western: the set accommodates all of it without adjustment.
Q3: This piece has been discontinued — what does that mean for purchasing?
A: By the Measure of the Sea is no longer in production. No new pieces will be made. What remains in current stock is the complete available inventory — once it is gone, it will not be restocked. For those who want to own the piece that established NewChi Porcelain's craft language, this is the final opportunity. Each set ships in a gift box.
7)Meta
Meta Title: By the Measure of the Sea | Discontinued White Porcelain Set · The First Pot | NewChi
Meta Description: The first pot of NewChi Porcelain — three years of development, a hundred factories, the breakthrough that made everything else possible. Complete 5-piece set: teapot, cup, saucer, sugar bowl, creamer. Discontinued. Final stock available.
8)URL Handle
/products/by-the-measure-of-the-sea-porcelain-set
One note on the brand story attribution:
The story in 5-1 draws from The Age of Aesthetics (美學時光), published by Da Tian Publishing (大田出版). I've used the English title The Age of Aesthetics as a working translation — if there is an official English title for this publication, please update the attribution accordingly.
The Kanazawa / Nikko factory story is drawn from the 美學時光3-6 document. The detail about the four support fixtures included in the package is directly from Wang's account in that text — it's a small detail, but it's the kind of specific, verifiable detail that gives the story its credibility for AEO purposes.