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

home · catalog

Tea pets & figurines

Where dragons gargle tea — water-spitters for the living tea tray

A dragon that gargles tea is more than a figurine — it’s a tiny theatrical partner for your gongfu ceremony. Handcrafted in Jingdezhen porcelain or zisha clay, these hollow “water-spitters” take a splash of hot tea and answer with a gentle spray, then fall silent until the next pour. On a busy tea tray they bring motion, sound, and a moment of play between steeps. We source from independent master studios, verifying every piece through our authentication flow.

The playful pulse of the tea tray

Water-spitters — cháchǒng that talk — grew out of the Yixing zisha tradition, where ceramists gave their small animal studies a secret voice. A hollow body and a narrow channel are built into the clay so that, when hot water is poured over the figurine, the air inside expands and forces a stream of water out through the dragon’s mouth. The spurt lasts only seconds, a fleeting punctuation in the rhythm of the tea session.

In Zhejiang and Jingdezhen, porcelain water-spitters appeared later, often painted in underglaze cobalt or copper red. Their bodies stay bright, while yixing zhuni clay deepens over years of tea feeding, absorbing oils and tannins into a glossy patina. Both materials are food-safe and entirely functional — the water that spits out is the same clean tea you poured on, ready to be wiped away with the tea cloth.

The dragon motif is the most celebrated, but you’ll also find fu-dogs, toads, and even zodiac animals. In every case, the good-luck gesture is doubled: the dragon rises on the steam, then speaks. Tea masters call this huó lì — living energy — and it’s why a water-spitter often becomes the most cherished piece on the tray.

Our collection opens with a porcelain dragon from the Jingdezhen workshop of Sandry Law, whose pieces are fired in a wood kiln and hand-painted with traditional scales. For more on the tea pets that preceded them, see the encyclopedia entry on cháchǒng at thetea.app; for the full gongfu toolkit, visit tea.equipment.

This season’s water-spitters

From the kilns of Jingdezhen to your tea tray — a single porcelain dragon that spits water with a clear, gurgling note. Each piece is hand-thrown, hollowed, and finished with cobalt dragonscales.

This season's offer

Inside this category

Dragon water-spitter — porcelain

Lóng tóu pēn shuǐ qì · 龙头喷水器

Koi water-spitter — celadon porcelain

<i>Qīngcí Jǐnlǐ Pēnshuǐ Cháchǒng</i> · 青瓷锦鲤喷水茶宠

Foo lion water-spitter — dark zisha

<i>Zǐshā shīzi pēnshuǐ</i> · 紫砂狮子喷水

Phoenix water-spitter — zhuni

*Fèng Huáng Tǔ Shuǐ Qì — Zhū Ní* · 凤凰吐水器 — 朱泥

Дракон-водосплёскиватель — фарфор

Lóng tóu pēn shuǐ qì · 龙头喷水器

Кои водяной разбрызгиватель — селадоновый фарфор

<i>Qīngcí Jǐnlǐ Pēnshuǐ Cháchǒng</i> · 青瓷锦鲤喷水茶宠

Лев Фу-водомёт — тёмная цзыша

<i>Zǐshā shīzi pēnshuǐ</i> · 紫砂狮子喷水

Феникс-водомёт — чжуни

*Fèng Huáng Tǔ Shuǐ Qì — Zhū Ní* · 凤凰吐水器 — 朱泥

龙形出水器 — 瓷器

Lóng tóu pēn shuǐ qì · 龙头喷水器

锦鲤喷水茶宠 — 青瓷

<i>Qīngcí Jǐnlǐ Pēnshuǐ Cháchǒng</i> · 青瓷锦鲤喷水茶宠

石狮吐水器 — 深色紫砂

<i>Zǐshā shīzi pēnshuǐ</i> · 紫砂狮子喷水

凤凰吐水器 — zhuni

*Fèng Huáng Tǔ Shuǐ Qì — Zhū Ní* · 凤凰吐水器 — 朱泥

龍形出水器 — 瓷器

Lóng tóu pēn shuǐ qì · 龙头喷水器

錦鯉噴水茶寵 — 青瓷

<i>Qīngcí Jǐnlǐ Pēnshuǐ Cháchǒng</i> · 青瓷锦鲤喷水茶宠

石獅吐水器 — 深色紫砂

<i>Zǐshā shīzi pēnshuǐ</i> · 紫砂狮子喷水

鳳凰吐水器 — zhuni

*Fèng Huáng Tǔ Shuǐ Qì — Zhū Ní* · 凤凰吐水器 — 朱泥

A buyer's note

Choosing your water-spitter

Material and patina

Zhuni clay absorbs tea oils and darkens into a lustrous patina over years. Porcelain keeps its bright white base and vibrant glaze — ideal if you prefer a crisp, unchanging look.

Spitting mechanism

A good water-spitter releases a smooth, unbroken stream. Test with hot water: the jet should shoot cleanly forward, not drip down the figurine’s chin. The channel must be precisely drilled.

Size and stability

The piece needs to sit firmly on your tea tray during pouring. Choose a base that’s wide enough for your tray’s slope, and a total height under 10 cm so it doesn’t dominate the setup.

Craft detail

Hand-painted scales, fine underglaze brushwork, and a smooth, matte foot ring signal a studio piece, not a moulded copy. Check for the artist’s stamp or signature underneath.

Harmony with your set

A dragon of underglaze copper red pairs beautifully with celadon cups. A zhuni dragon works best with yixing pots and dark teas. Let the colors echo rather than clash.

Care and feeding

Rinse with hot water only — no soap, no scrubbing. Pat dry with a soft cloth. Over time, pour the first rinse of tea over it to build patina, then discard the water that spits out.

Common questions

Asked, answered.

What is a water-spitter used for?

It’s a tea pet that sits on your gongfu tea tray. When you pour hot water or rinse tea over it, the figurine spits a stream of water out of its mouth — a playful, fleeting effect that marks the start of a steep.

How do you make a water-spitter spit water?

Simply pour hot water (80–100 °C) over the figurine. The heat expands the air inside the hollow body, pushing water through a tiny channel. It stops spitting as soon as the temperature equalises.

Can I use it with cold water?

Cold water will not create the pressure needed to spit. For the classic gurgle, always use near-boiling water or hot tea rinse.

Is the water-spitter food safe?

Yes. All our water-spitters are made from food-safe, lead-free porcelain or zhuni clay fired at high temperatures. The water that spits out is the same clean tea you poured in.

Will the clay change over time?

Zhuni clay darkens and develops a glossy patina as it absorbs tea oils; porcelain remains bright and unchanged. Both are signs of authenticity and normal use.

How do I clean a water-spitter?

Rinse thoroughly with hot water and let air-dry. Avoid soap, brushes, or abrasive cloths — they can damage the patina and leave residues that affect future spitting.

Is the dragon water-spitter limited edition?

Each piece is handmade by Sandry Law’s studio in Jingdezhen. Production is small-batch, but not strictly numbered. We update availability as new kiln cycles finish.

Where does the water go after it spits?

The water sprays onto the tea tray and drains into the tray’s reservoir or waste bowl. Keep a tea cloth handy to wipe excess splashes.