Rustic Cup, Gold

£12.99

A Handleless Cup with Warmth and Weight

Some cups disappear into the background; this one earns a second look. The Rustic Cup in gold is a Japanese ceramic cup with a warm, lustrous glaze and a deliberately hand-finished, tactile surface, the kind of piece that makes an everyday cup of tea feel considered. Handleless and comfortably weighted in the palm, it crosses easily from green tea to sake to a simple glass of water, and looks the part on a restaurant table as much as at home.

Part of a three-colour family. Also available in black and white.

Why You'll Reach For It

  • Warm gold glaze: a lustrous, characterful finish that lifts the simplest serve
  • Hand-finished feel: a tactile, rustic surface with the slight irregularity that gives Japanese ceramics their charm
  • Genuinely versatile: tea, sake, water or coffee, one cup that does several jobs
  • Restaurant or home: at home on a tasting-menu table or your own kitchen shelf

How to Use

  • Green tea: the handleless form is the traditional way to serve sencha or hojicha
  • Sake: use as a guinomi-style cup for chilled or room-temperature sake
  • Everyday drinks: water, cold brew or a short coffee, it is not precious
  • Presentation: small amuse, dashi shots or dessert components for a restaurant table

湯のみ — The handleless cup, and the beauty of the imperfect

The handleless cup is a fixture of the Japanese table, the yunomi for everyday tea, the guinomi for sake, both designed to be cradled in the hand so the warmth and weight are part of the experience. Japanese ceramics prize what the West would call imperfection: the slight variation in glaze, the tactile surface, the sense that a human hand was involved. That sensibility, often linked to wabi-sabi, finds beauty in the rustic and the understated rather than the flawless and machine-made. A gold glaze adds a quiet richness without tipping into flashiness, which is exactly the balance a good Japanese cup tries to strike. Learn more in our guide to Japanese ceramics.

What can you drink from a handleless cup?

Almost anything, but it suits drinks served warm rather than scalding, or cold, since there is no handle to keep your fingers off the heat. Green tea is the classic use, brewed below boiling so the cup is comfortable to hold. Sake works beautifully, chilled or at room temperature. Water, iced tea, cold brew coffee and short espresso-style coffees all sit happily in it too. The point of the form is the contact between hand and cup, so it rewards drinks you sip and linger over rather than gulp.

Product Details

Type Handleless ceramic cup (yunomi / guinomi style)
Finish Rustic gold glaze, hand-finished
Material Ceramic
Best For Tea, sake, water, coffee, presentation
Origin Japan
Care Hand wash recommended to protect the glaze
Is each cup identical?

No, and that is the appeal. Because of the hand-finished, rustic style, expect slight variation in the glaze and surface from cup to cup. This is characteristic of Japanese ceramics rather than a fault; each piece is a little different, which is part of what gives them warmth against the uniformity of mass-produced tableware. If you are buying several for a set, they will sit together as a family rather than as identical clones.

How should I care for it?

Hand washing is recommended to keep the gold glaze at its best over time. Warm water and a soft sponge are all it needs; avoid abrasive scourers and harsh dishwasher cycles, which can dull a decorative glaze with repeated use. Let it cool before washing if it has held a hot drink, as with any ceramic, to avoid thermal shock.

Can I use it for sake as well as tea?

Yes. The handleless form is essentially the same shape used for both tea (yunomi) and sake (guinomi) in Japan, so one cup serves both. It suits chilled or room-temperature sake particularly well. For hot sake, fill it part-way so the rim stays comfortable to hold, since there is no handle. Its versatility is one of the main reasons to own a few.


SKU : T0105