tea.glass · sampling channel Encyclopedia · School · Atlas · Pu-erh · Equipment EN · RU · · · FR · ES · AR
tea.glass Cart (0)

home · catalog

Glassware

Transparent storage for the tea you're drinking now

Sealed glass jars that sit on the counter, keeping your current favourites fresh without hiding their beauty. Unlike long-term cellaring at tea.furniture, these are for the leaves you reach for every day — clear enough to admire the twist of an oolong, tight enough to lock in aroma.

The craft of the tea jar

In the world of tea, storage is the silent guardian of flavour. Before the porcelain caddies and seasoned Yixing jars designed for long-term cellaring — explored in depth at tea.furniture — there’s a more immediate vessel: the glass storage jar. It sits on the bench, catching the morning light, holding the tea you’re actually drinking right now.

The lineage of these jars is less about ceremony and more about clarity. Laboratory-grade borosilicate glass, first refined in the 19th century for beakers and test tubes, proved ideal for preserving chemical purity. Tea enthusiasts soon recognised its value: an inert material that imparts no odour, resists thermal shock, and — crucially — lets you see the leaves. A glance tells you how much Lóngjǐng is left, whether the Mí Lán Xiāng pearls have unfurled in transit, or if that precious Silver Needle is running low.

Our jars are produced by Gao-Liuzhou, a family glass studio that has spent decades perfecting the balance between seal and simplicity. Each jar is mouth-blown from high-borosilicate glass, and the rim is ground to a flat, smooth surface. The stopper — either glass-on-glass or fitted with a discreet silicone gasket — locks in aroma without the plastic tang of cheaper seals. For teas sensitive to UV light — think fresh green teas, fragrant yellow teas, or delicate white buds — we offer amber-tinted glass that blocks over 90% of the visible light spectrum, slowing photo-oxidation while still revealing the silhouette of the leaf.

Yet the jar is not just a functional tool; it’s a design object. The minimalist aesthetic, reminiscent of Japanese shin-bisei (new beauty), transforms a row of jars into a museum of colour and texture: twisted oolong in deep jade, wiry black tea with golden tips, the silvery fluff of a white peony. This visual inventory is a quiet joy of the modern tea corner, and it aligns with a philosophy that even the everyday deserves a clear vessel.

When you graduate from the daily drinking rotation and feel the pull of aging your own cakes, our friends at tea.furniture offer long-term ceramic and tin storage. But for the leaves you’ll finish this month, nothing beats the clarity of glass. In our tea school (tea.school), the ‘Tea Care and Storage’ module covers best practices for keeping your tea at peak condition — a proper glass jar is step one. For a deeper dive into why different teas demand different storage, browse the encyclopedic entries on thetea.app.

This season’s jars from Gao-Liuzhou

Three sizes, two colours, one commitment to keeping your tea bench immaculate. All from the glass studio of Gao-Liuzhou, known for precision seals and clean lines.

A buyer's note

How to choose your storage jar

Match capacity to your consumption

100ml suits small, precious batches you sip slowly; 400ml works for daily drinkers where you refill weekly. A set of six 100ml jars is perfect for an ever-changing rotation of samples.

Clear or amber

Amber glass blocks most UV light, making it ideal for light-sensitive teas like green or yellow. Clear glass lets you admire the leaf colour and shape — excellent for oolongs and black teas stored away from direct sun.

Seal mechanics

Check for a wide mouth and a smooth glass-on-glass stopper or a high-quality silicone gasket. Both should create an airtight barrier that locks in fragrance without trapping moisture.

Countertop footprint

If bench space is tight, opt for stackable profiles or compact single jars. The 100ml set stacks neatly, while the 400ml amber jar stands alone as a statement piece.

Cleaning and care

Choose jars that disassemble fully — removable gaskets, washable lids — so you can keep them pristine between different teas. Hand-washing is recommended; borosilicate glass tolerates temperature changes but not rough handling.

A jar for every tea

Keep your current black, green, oolong, and white separate. Using dedicated jars prevents cross-contamination of flavours and lets you gauge your stash at a glance.

Common questions

Asked, answered.

Can I store any tea in a glass jar?

Most teas are fine for short-term use (up to a few months). For long-term aging, opaque, breathable containers like those at tea.furniture are better. Amber glass helps protect light-sensitive greens and yellows.

Are the jars completely airtight?

The glass-on-glass seal or silicone gasket creates an excellent barrier against air and humidity, but they are not vacuum-sealed. They’re designed for daily use, not hermetic cellaring.

How do I clean the jars?

Hand-wash with warm water and mild soap, then dry thoroughly. The silicone gasket is removable for deep cleaning. Avoid abrasive sponges to keep the glass scratch-free.

Will the seal wear out over time?

Silicone gaskets are durable but can be replaced if they degrade. The glass-on-glass stopper joints should last indefinitely if kept clean and dry.

Can I use these jars for other things?

Certainly — spices, dried herbs, or even as a minimalist bud vase. But they’re engineered for tea, with a focus on aroma retention and UV protection where needed.

Why choose amber over clear?

Amber glass blocks most UV light, slowing photo-oxidation of delicate teas. If your jars sit on a sunlit counter, amber is a wise choice. Clear is ideal for cupboards or shaded shelves.

Is the glass borosilicate?

Yes, all our storage jars are made from high-borosilicate glass. It’s resistant to thermal shock, chemically inert, and remarkably clear, making it the gold standard for tea storage.