Tiipoi Longpi Pottery

Tiipoi works with a small number of artisans, led by master craftsman Khanmung Sasa, to create useful pottery made of river clay and ground stone from Longpi, a remote village in Manipur, India. Each piece is hand built, sun-dried and woodfired, with a burnished surface that forms a natural protective seal ideal for slow cooking.

Longpi Seasoning Pot

£22.00
Black Clay
Size: One Size

Longpi seasoning pot made using an age-old technique unique to just two villages in north-east India. Made by mixing ground black stone with locally found clay, longpi pieces are hand built, left in the sun to dry out and then woodfired. The burnished finish creates a natural protective seal, whilst characterising longpi with its deep black patina. Being handmade, each will vary slightly in shape and size.

Finished with a side loop which holds a neem wood spoon, made from timber from storm-felled trees and responsibly managed woodland in Jharkhand, eastern India.

Details

Hand wash. Clay and stone. Neem wood spoon.
Made in India.
Each ceramic piece has been thrown or pressed and glazed by hand. Due to the handmade nature, there may be pleasing variations and irregularities in colour, size and shape.
Approx. H 9.5cm x D 7cm.

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The Making of Tiipoi’s Longpi Pottery

In his Bangalore studio, artisan Khanmung Sasa shapes vessels by hand. The distinctive black clay he uses comes from Longpi, a remote village in Manipur. It is gathered by his uncles and cousins, prepared by hand, packed into sacks and driven south, then loaded onto a train that winds across the subcontinent. “It takes about three months just to get the clay,” says Spandana Gopal, founder of design studio Tiipoi.

Khanmung has pottery in his blood. “His father is a potter, and his grandfather was a known Longpi potter,” Spandana explains. He builds each piece using techniques passed down through his family, while three women from the surrounding neighbourhood finish and burnish the pots by hand.

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