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🫖 Shui Ping F1 70s. Flat bottom
🔎 The teapot catalog provides only additional information, or rather visualization, since the first thing you need to look at is the clay and details. But how pleasing are the rare cases when a similar teapot comes across in the catalog to confirm the definition. Not only is the teapot itself rare, but it was exactly the same one that was used as a reference. A more detailed review will be in the video on Instagram.

🔎 About the flat bottom. Due to the small size of the teapot and the even smaller size of the neck, it is impossible to photograph the bottom inside. The flat bottom in itself is a marker of the rarity of the teapot, and the combination with a volume of 28 ml is generally something atypical. Since the peak of the production of teapots with a flat bottom fell on the 60s, and also partly on the beginning of the 70s, this shui pin can be dated to the early 70s.
🧱 Hong Ni clay (red), medium-high firing.
🧂 Each teapot with a single hole is equipped with a filter-nest made of food-grade stainless steel.